Malachi O'Doherty has written:
'Empty pulpits'
Richard A. Taylor has written: 'Haggai, Malachi' -- subject(s): Commentaries
J. R. Monroe has written: 'Argo and Irene' 'Malachi and Miranda'
Malachi, the last of the Old Testament prophets, wrote the book bearing his name.A:We do not really know the prophet who wrote the Book of Malachi, but there was no person called Malachi. The word 'Malachi', used in the title of the book, actually means 'messenger' and is based on its use in the text. The author was anonymous, so we know nothing about him.
Beth Glazier-McDonald has written: 'Malachi, the divine messenger' -- subject(s): Bible, Commentaries
Nobody seems to know when the Book of Malachi was written, but many agree that it was written in the fifth century BC. That is some 500 years before the birth of Jesus Christ.
According to tradition, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi all wrote during the same period, around 350 BCE. However, some believe that Malachi was written as early as 455 BCE.
Malachi is the last book in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. It was written around the 5th century BC.
i believe the answer is Malachi
A:We do not know who the prophet 'Malachi' was - there was never a person actually called Malachi. The Book of Malachi was written anonymously, probably in the early post-Exilic period. Verses 3:1-4 refer to 'my messenger' (Hebrew: mal'aki) and it is this reference that gives the book its name: Malachi.ADDITION: Possibly there was no writer of the book of Malachi by the name of Malachi, but since all other prophetic books have historically identified their author in the introductory heading, this suggests that Malachi was indeed the name of the last OT writing prophet in Israel.Jewish tradition identifies him as a member of the Great Synagogue that collected and preserved the Scriptures.
The modern arrangement of books in the Old Testament part of the Bible has the Book of Malachi as the final OT book. For Jews who call the written Torah the Tanakh with the section called the Kethuvim (Writings) list Chronicles as the final 'scroll.'
Thomas Thomason Perowne has written: 'The Proverbs' -- subject(s): Commentaries, Bible 'A Memoir of the Rev. Thomas Gajetan Ragland: Fellow of the Corpus Christi College, Cambridge ..' 'Malachi' -- subject(s): Bible
John Wilson Croker has written: 'The Croker papers' 'Two letters on Scottish affairs, from Edward Bradwardine Waverley [i.e. John Wilson Croker] to Malachi Malagrowther [i.e. Sir Walter Scott]'