• Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

"Major" prophets vs. "Minor" prophets

wpe3bql

Member
Is there a very precise, objective set of standards by which a certain OT prophetic book is a "Major" prophet's (usually Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel & Daniel) in distinction to a book that is relegated to being written by a so-called "Minor" prophet (usually Hosea - Malachi)?

The only "standard" I've ever seen was that of a particular book's length, or possibly when that book was written.

To add a bit more confusion to this subject, there are some "scholars" who insist that most (if not ALL) OT prophetic books were written much later than traditionally thought.

Moreover, many of these same "scholars" will tell you that either a book wasn't really written by the person for whom it was named; or, even worse, most of these prophetic books are merely allegories whose validity is about as equivalent to Aesop's fables.

So.... Is there, in fact, an absolute set of criteria to determine whether a certain OT book is a "Major" prophet and by no means a "Minor" prophet (or vice versa?
 

wpe3bql

Member
Yes, the size of the book.

By "size" do you mean the number of words in the original language of the book? The number of verses and/or chapters the book has?

If it's the number of chapters, then Zechariah (14 chapters) should be a "Major" prophet.
 

Greektim

Well-Known Member
The 12 minor prophets have been grouped together for a long time as the book of the 12... like BCE. And Daniel was not considered a prophet at all but part of the writings. So Isa, Jer, and Eze are significantly longer than the other 12.
 

preachinjesus

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
It is also helpful to consider the Hebrew order of the OT:

OT_Hebrew_Order.jpg


This order better visualizes the intent and layout of the books. That said, the difference between the 12 minor prophets and the three (four) major prophets is indeed their length. I still consider Daniel an Major Prophet. Lamentations (a book of poetry) is included alongside Jeremiah as it is his work.

Good thread.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Greektim

Well-Known Member
It is also helpful to consider the Hebrew order of the OT:

OT_Hebrew_Order.jpg


This order better visualizes the intent and layout of the books. That said, the difference between the 12 minor prophets and the three (four) major prophets is indeed their length. I still consider Daniel an Major Prophet. Lamentations (a book of poetry) is included alongside Jeremiah as it is his work.

Good thread.
This was my point... the Hebrew Bible has in part played a role in why we have 12 minor prophets.

I disagree w/ Daniel being a prophetic book. Prophecy is simply tell God's message. It may or may not be about the future, but it is certainly God's messenger preaching to God's people about covenant fidelity. Daniel is not about that. Daniel is the beginnings of what would later become apocalyptic literature. Thus it fits well in the writings. And it is mostly narrative but not about a prophetic ministry (like Jonah) but his ministry in Babylon and Persian. Of course, there are prophecies in Daniel, but then there are also some in Deuteronomy.
 
Top