The Holy Bible Background part 1

Jan 15, 2020 · 13m 51s
The Holy Bible Background part 1
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The Bible It's one of the most influential books in human history. It explores the big questions of why we exist. It's inspired many people to do amazing things and...

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The Bible It's one of the most influential books in human history.

It explores the big questions of why we exist.

It's inspired many people to do amazing things and confuse many others.

And you probably got one sitting around somewhere.

So what is the Bible actually?

Well the Bible is a small library of books that all emerged out of the history of the people of Ancient Israel.

And in one sense they were just like any other ancient civilization.

But among them were a long line of individuals called prophets.

And they viewed Israel's story as anything but ordinary.

They saw it as a central part what God was doing for all of humanity.

And these prophets were literary geniuses.

They expertly crafted the Hebrew language to write epic narratives, very sophisticated poetry.

They were masters of metaphor and storytelling and they leveraged all this to explore life's most complicated questions about death and life and the human struggle.

So there's a lot of different authors writing this book.

And these texts were produced over a thousand year period, starting with Israel's origins in Egypt.

Then leading up to their kingdom with their first temple.

But eventually they were conquered by the Babylonians who took them away into exile.

Then, at a crucial moment in their history, many Israelites returned to their land.

They built a second temple, they reformed their identity.

And this is when the Jewish scriptures begin to be formed into the shape that we have them today.

Okay, the Jewish Bible.

What's in it?

Well I'm glad you asked.

Well in Hebrew, it's called by an acronym Ta Nak

The T stands for TORAH, sometimes called the law, that's Israel's five books foundation story.

The N stands for NEVI'IM, The Hebrew word for profits.

And this actually consists of the historical books that tell Israel's story from the prophets point of view then you get the poetic books of the prophets themselves.

The K stands for KETUVIM, the Hebrew word for writings.

This is a diverse collection of poetic books, wisdom books, and more narrative.

And the Jewish people believe that through all of these literary works God speaks to people.

Now, there are other Jewish writings being produced during this Second Temple period as well.

A really diverse group of text, and these too were highly valued in Jewish communities.

And there was debate from ancient times about whether or not some of these should be considered part of their scriptures.

This is a lot of different writings over a long period of time.


Why did they put them all together like this?


Well I'm glad you asked.

Well altogether these texts tell an epic story about how God is working through these people to bring order and beauty out of the chaos of our world.

And it all builds up to a hope for a new leader who would come and renew all creation and then that's not conclude, and this leader never comes.

So it's an expertly crafted work but it's missing an ending.

That's exactly right, what you heard is what I just said.

Now, a few centuries later, a Jewish prophet comes on to the scene, named Jesus of Nazareth.

He claimed he was carrying the Ta Nak story forward.

Yeah, so Jesus, did a bunch of cool stuff and He was killed.

But his followers claimed he was alive from the dead.

Yeah they said that Jesus was that long awaited leader who would restore the world.

And so these earliest followers called Apostles, they composed new literary works about the story of Jesus, they call these good news or the gospel.

They formed an account called Acts about the spread of the Jesus movement outside of Israel.

And then they circulated letters to different Jesus communities all around the ancient world.

And they saw these writings as part of the scripture.

The apostles wrote all of this as a fulfillment of that epic story found in the Ta NaK.

And they were continuing the literary genius of the Jewish tradition.

They also believe that God was speaking to His people through these texts alongside the scriptures of Israel.

So that's the old and new testament.

But what did the early Christians think of the other second temple literature?

Great question.

Well different groups had different views about some of these books but we know they read them and valued these texts because they passed them along with the Jewish Scriptures.

Okay so we've got the Ta NaK, the Jewish Scriptures.

We got these other second temple period works.

Then the writing of the Apostles about Jesus.

And that's a lot of literature.

So what's in my Bible?

So, the Christian movement has taken different forms over 2000 years, and from the beginning all Christians recognized the Ta NaK and the New Testament as scripture.

And for centuries much of the Second Temple literature was read as part of the Biblical tradition.

The Catholic Church eventually made it official, and called some of the books from this collection the Deutero-canonical Books.

Some orthodox churches used even more books from this second temple literature.

And then in the 1500s during the reformation, Protestant Christians wanted to go back to the oldest writings of the prophets and apostles so they accepted only the old and new testamentals.



All right get those phone lines buzzing by the mighty dozens and let us know what you think of today's episode.

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Author Jerry M. Joyce
Organization Jerry Joyce
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