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When Judean exiles returned from Babylon around 538 BCE, they found rubble and poverty instead of the glorious restoration their prophets had promised. That unbearable gap between prophecy and reality drove the most consequential theological shift in Western history: hope migrated from within history to the end of the world itself. This video traces how Third Isaiah, Second Zechariah, and Joel constructed the eschatological template that would later shape Daniel, the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Book of Revelation, and the apocalyptic imagination of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Key concepts covered: • The post-exilic crisis: why the return from Babylon failed to match prophetic expectations of a Davidic king, national sovereignty, and restored Jerusalem • Third Isaiah (Isaiah 56–66): the "new heaven and new earth" of chapter 65 as a point-by-point reversal of the Genesis curses — a reboot of creation, not mere reform • Third Isaiah's radical inclusivism: welcoming foreigners and eunuchs against the exclusivist positions of Deuteronomy 23 and Ezra-Nehemiah • Second Zechariah (Zechariah 9–14): the darkest-before-dawn narrative pattern — nations gather against Jerusalem, the city falls, then God intervenes as sovereign over all the earth • Joel's Day of the Lord: locust plague as military metaphor, cosmic signs (sun to darkness, moon to blood), the Valley of Jehoshaphat as site of final judgment, and paradise restored • The assembled eschatological script: warning signs, cosmic disturbances, nations gathering, near-total destruction, divine intervention, judgment, then paradise — a repeatable template inherited by later apocalyptic literature • Three lasting consequences of the eschatological turn: a new relationship with time (history has a destination), a reframing of suffering (misery as prelude to divine action), and the conceptual architecture for apocalypticism as a genre ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ SOURCE MATERIALS The source materials for this video are from • Lecture 23. Visions of the End: Daniel and...