Difference between revisions of "The Prophet from Beit El/2"

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Reversing the Prophecy of the Man of God
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Reversing the Man of God's Prophecy
<p>The Prophet from Beit El hoped that by having the Man of God backtrack on his own words and prophetic sign, he could undo the prophecy against Beit El, and restore legitimacy to the worship taking place there.</p>
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<p>The Prophet from Beit El hoped that by having the Man of God backtrack on his own words and prophetic sign, he could undo the prophecy against Beit El and / or restore legitimacy to the worship taking place there.</p>
 
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<category name="Test of Prophet">
 
<category name="Test of Prophet">

Version as of 08:22, 3 December 2017

The Prophet from Beit El

Exegetical Approaches

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

Reversing the Man of God's Prophecy

The Prophet from Beit El hoped that by having the Man of God backtrack on his own words and prophetic sign, he could undo the prophecy against Beit El and / or restore legitimacy to the worship taking place there.

Testing the Man of God

The Prophet from Beit El did not know if the Man of God was a legitimate prophet or an emissary sent by Rechovam to attack Beit El for political reasons. His invitation was intended to discover whether or not he truly spoke the word of Hashem.

Sources:modern scholars1

Helping the Man of God

The prophet's motives were altruistic. He simply wanted to prevent the Man of God from going home hungry.

Sources:Abarbanel

Coopting the Man of God

The prophet from Beit El hoped to sway the man of God to defect to Beit El and work with him in his prophetic business.