Elijah
The Prophet Who Defied Kings
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Shane Larson
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
On a mountain above the Mediterranean in the ninth century BCE, a lone Israelite prophet challenged four hundred and fifty priests of the Tyrian storm god to a public contest of fire. The loser would die. The winner would define which god the kingdom of Israel worshipped for the next three thousand years. The Hebrew Bible says Elijah won. This book asks what actually happened on that mountain — and why the story has refused to go away.
Elijah: The Prophet Who Defied Kings is a narrative history of the most politically dangerous prophet in the Hebrew Bible, set inside the real kingdom he walked into: the house of Omri, the wealthiest and most internationally connected dynasty Israel ever produced, locked in a diplomatic marriage with Phoenician Tyre through the princess we now call Jezebel. Drawing on the Deuteronomistic History, the Mesha Stele, Assyrian royal inscriptions, and decades of Iron Age archaeology at Samaria, Megiddo, and Hazor, Shane Larson reconstructs Elijah not as a devotional figure but as a political actor — an outsider prophet from Gilead fighting a state-sponsored Baalism backed by the era's dominant naval power.
The book follows every famous beat of the cycle — the drought, the widow at Zarephath, the ravens, Mount Carmel, the flight to Horeb, the still small voice, the calling of Elisha, the murder of Naboth, Ahab's death in battle, the fire from heaven, the whirlwind — and then does something few books on Elijah attempt: it traces what happened next. How Malachi's Jewish tradition made him the herald of the messiah. How the Gospels wrote him into the Transfiguration. How the Qur'an named him Ilyas. How he became the only major biblical figure who never dies, and why three religions keep waiting for him to return.
You will learn:
- Who the historical house of Omri actually was, and why outside sources rated them higher than the Bible does
- The real identity of Jezebel — Phoenician princess, not cartoon villain — and the politics of the Tyrian alliance
- What the Carmel contest tells us about Iron Age god-war between Yahwism and coastal Baalism
- What the Hebrew phrase often rendered "still small voice" literally says, and why translators have argued over it for centuries
- How the Elijah cycle was assembled, from oral prophetic traditions to the final Deuteronomistic edit
- Why Judaism, Christianity, and Islam each need Elijah to still be alive
This book is for you if...
- You want ancient history written as history, not devotion or debunking
- You've read Tom Holland, Mary Beard, or Eric Cline and want the same treatment applied to the world of the Hebrew Bible
- You're curious about Iron Age Levantine politics — Phoenicia, Tyre, Sidon, Damascus, Assyria
- You want to understand the Jezebel story without the misogynistic shorthand
- You're drawn to the strange afterlife of ancient figures in later religion and culture
If you've read The Purple Merchants, Canaan to Carthage, or Iron Age Dawn, this is the book that puts a single dangerous prophet at the center of that same Mediterranean world.
Buy now and step onto Mount Carmel.
A very thorough tour of the story of Elijah
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