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History in the Bible
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History in the Bible

Author: Garry Stevens

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A guide to the history presented in the Bible, for people of all faiths and backgrounds, presented by an independent podcaster, and biblical studies buff. I explore the religion of ancient Israel, the beginnings of Christianity, then finally the evolution of the heirs of Abraham to the year 200. I discuss every single book in every Bible (there are more than you think!). Lightly garnished with a dash of drollery, a soupçon of scrutiny, and not one ounce of objectivity. Not one ounce! The main narrative will conclude in January 2024. Bonus episodes will continue indefinitely.
210 Episodes
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This is a bonus episode for season two. Bernie Maopolski from the Fan of History podcast and I talk history podcasting and the archaeology of ancient Israel.
In this co-production with Steve Guerra of the History of the Papacy podcast, we tackle the morally difficult book of Joshua
In this bonus episode I am joined by Omri and Gil of the rambunctious podcast “A Podcast of Biblical Proportions” for a discussion about the Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and a little bit about Joseph. Theme music "Inspiring Teaser" by Rafael Krux, https://filmmusic.io/song/5672-inspiring-teaser, license https://filmmusic.io/standard-license.
Only two of Abraham's heirs survived to the year 200 CE/AD: rabbinic Judaism, and the imperial church incorporate. My final epiodes explore how that happened.
In this bonus, I continue my collaboration with Steve Guerra of the "History of the Papacy" show (https://www.atozhistorypage.com/), and Scott Mcandless of the "Retelling the Bible" podcast (https://retellingthebible.wordpress.com/). In this show we revisit Scott’s show on Abraham's three mysterious vistors. I also have an announcement about the final episodes in my main narrative, and a forthcoming book.
Introducing the History in the Bible Podcast, from www.historyinthebible.com.
1.2 What is the Bible?

1.2 What is the Bible?

2015-03-2522:234

The Jews, Catholics, Protestants, Orthodox, and Church of the East all have different versions of the Bible, with dissimilar books, based on different ancient texts. I explain why. For a handy summary chart, check out my chart Canons of the Old Testament at www.historyinthebible.com.
1.3 Canons and Criticism

1.3 Canons and Criticism

2015-04-1224:527

I conclude my tour of the canons, finishing with the zaniest of them all. I also get into  the lesser known textual traditions: those of the Samaritans, and the Aramaic and Syriac translations. With that under my belt, I begin to explore the history of the history of the bible. I start with Rabbi Abraham ibn Ezra and end up with Johann Semler. Along the way, I meet Archbishop Ussher, he who decided the world was created in 4004 BC,  and decide he is not only over-rated, but a complete ditz.
I trace the beginnings of biblical archaeology, from Carsten Niebuhr to John Garstang, the man who thought he found Joshua's city of Jericho.
1.5 The Names of God

1.5 The Names of God

2015-05-1017:592

The finds at the ancient city of Ugarit in Syria provided us with our knowledge of the religion of Canaan, the land conquered by the Israelites. Some of this religion, such as the god El and the monsters Leviathon and Bohemoth found their way into the ancient religion of Israel and into the Bible. I also discuss the most common names of god found in the Bible (Yahweh, El, Elohim, Adonai), and what they mean.
This potted history of the Middle East in the Bronze Age sets the background for the episodes that follow. It traces the story of Canaan as it was uncovered, and then reinterperted, by archaeologists from the 1930s to the present day. I introduce William Foxwell Albright, the most influential Middle Eastern scholar of the 20th century. I also cover the greatest catastrophe of antiquity, the Bronze Age Collapse, and how scholars construct chronologies.
Work by scholars from the late 19th century had established that five sources lay behind the Pentateuch. They came to be known by letters: J, E, P, and D. These theories were a mainstay of biblical studies until recently. Although questioned in the past 20 years, the theory known as the Documentary Hypothesis is still accounted a firm starting place for any sort of examination of the text of the Pentateuch. I also find out why the Bible is divided into chapters and verses.
The opening chapters of Genesis recount two stories of creation, neither of which involves Satan. One is from the J source, the other from the P source. I compare these to the creation stories from ancient Mesopotamian sources. Genesis has always been more important to Christians than to Jews, who regared Exodus as telling the central story of Judaism.  Naturally, that leads to a discussion of Jewish attitudes to IVF.
Flood epics were a dime a dozen in ancient Mesopotamia. Genesis has its own version. This section of Genesis is full of puzzles: Cain's gift of tabouleh is rejected; the dating system is a complete mess; Noah was alive in Abraham's time; Enoch goes to heaven; the mysterious Nephilim make an appearance; Canaan is cursed for no reason and the slavery of blacks is justified.
This is the first of an irregular series of bonus episodes, in addition to my fortnightly installments. In this bonus, I talk about history podcasting with Steve Guerra of the History of the Papacy podcast. Steve and the others at the history podcasters network have been a great help to me in getting this podcast going. You can visit Steve at http://atozhistorypage.com, and the history podcaster network at http://historypodcasters.com/. Thanks to Steve for doing all the heavy lifting in recording and editing this episode.
After the primeval stories, Genesis introduces the man who dominates and forms the very heart of of book, Abraham. He is the first of the patriarchs. God makes a real-estate deal with Abraham, giving him Canaan in return for eternal fidelity. Abraham has many adventures, meeting and swindling the Pharoah of Egypt; and encountering the mysterious Melkizedek, priest and king of Jerusalem. We also meet his scheming wife Sarai, his slave-wive Hagar, and his first-born son Ishmael.
This is the second of an irregular series of bonus episodes, in addition to my fortnightly installments. In this bonus episode, Stephen Guerra of the History of the Papacy podcast and I talk about the Second Temple period.  This was the time between the return of the Jews from the exile in Babylon in 538 BC to the destruction of the Temple by the Romans in 70 AD. You can visit Steve and the History of the Papacy podcast at http://atozhistorypage.com, or you can listen to him on iTunes. Again, thanks to Steve for doing all the editing and recording work.
Abraham swindles the Philistine king Abimelech just as he did Pharoah, and almost kills his son Isaac, following God's commands. At the very last minute, God says it's all been a test. Was this a remnant of ancient Israelite child sacrifice? After a perfunctory chapter or two on Isaac, Genesis forgets about him to talk about the Bible's greatest and least repentant con-man: Jacob, later known as Israel. We meet yet another scheming wife, Rebekah.
Jacob is the great trickster in the Bible, outwitting his father Isaac, his brother Esau, and even his own children. The P, E, and J sources have several different versions of Jacob's stories. For example, Jacob visits and names Bethel twice. There is the unsavoury incident of the rape of Jacob's daughter Dinah, met with a brutal and horrendous over-reaction from her brothers. We also have another unpleasant story about Jacob's son Judah and his daughter-in-law Tamar. We conclude with an introduction to Joseph.
We conclude the story of the patriarchs with a happy reunion between Jacob and his son Joseph, now an important minister in the Egyptian government. His family move to Egypt for a few centuries, a passage of time that passes in the blink of an eye. That concludes our survey of Genesis. We move on to the book of Exodus, amd introduce the great hero of the Hebrews, Moses.
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Comments (26)

Sid Leake

You are amazing; so thorough, so pleasing to listen to; you reveal so much research and information. I'm so pleased you created so many podcasts for me to enjoy. I'm sorry you've contracted cancer. I'm 83 and am battling prostate cancer myself. All the best to you. Thank you so much. Sid Leake Sugar Land, TX

Mar 16th
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Cj Hyndman

Like it

Feb 28th
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Lyca Loy

Thank You! Just found your podcast. I Love what you are doing. so far I have listened to 4. Very interesting! I will chatch up😊

Jan 20th
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Grace Sutula

This podcast is one of my staples! It is easily accessible to those without much knowledge of the Bible, but still has enough detail to challenge those who have learned about the Bible their entire lives. This is definitely one of my favorite podcasts!

Dec 13th
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Victoria Bleggi

anyone else having trouble getting this episode to download or play?

Aug 21st
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B Heff

My first venture into podcast listening and Dr Garry's work is fantastically interesting and funny.

Jul 10th
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Bomber 1004

Great to have you back.

Apr 13th
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rybepi

“Mormons, I’m looking at you.” Hahahaha

Mar 19th
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Don MacEachern

)

Dec 21st
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Peter O'Hearn

Why are Christians of the New Testament compared to the Jews of the Old Testament? The importance of the Old Testament for Christians are the prophecy of Christ's coming. According to C.H. Dodd, the Old Testament was almost left out of Christianity, but it importance was the prophets and history. Many of the stories in the Old Testament are skewed. Many of the books are just stories.

Oct 2nd
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OHIOsimpleman

humans are enslaved by sin

Aug 10th
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lisa bradford

the swallowing sound is killing me

Feb 4th
Reply (1)

#Royalebleu

:-)

Dec 29th
Reply (1)

יוחי מנש

love your podcast but here there are some mistakes worth correcting im an hebrew speaking israeli and a history fan today the word zedek meens justice or rightious so it would seem that malchizedek meens rightious king but that was not always the case the high priest during king david reign was zadok the priest .... so after a few centuries the word started meening justice but before that zedek was the cananite god of justice and that is why untill today the word zedek meens justice so basically back than the name malchizedek meens ... my king is the god zedek he was the king of jerusalem and acted as high preist take care yohai israel

Dec 3rd
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An interested party

hello I wanted to comment on the Trinity episode. I can see when you're using the wood analogy or egg analogy, I can understand that but what is hard for us to understand is why does Jesus pray to God if he is God why does he talk as though they're two separate beings If he is the being and how can Jesus die on the cross when he is God do you see what I mean I think that is the the part that confuses people the most and certainly the hardest part to explain. thank you

Sep 22nd
Reply (6)

Erin Ross

lol "Someone should write an operetta or a musical."

Aug 10th
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Bomber 1004

Professor you get better every month, Thank you

Jun 23rd
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Ciara Mcglade

Really enjoying the podcast! Finally caught up with all the episodes and looking forward to the next ones now!

Apr 14th
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