Podcasts about deuteronomist

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Best podcasts about deuteronomist

Latest podcast episodes about deuteronomist

Data Over Dogma
Episode 102: The Dave Ramsey Takedown

Data Over Dogma

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 58:03


Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the big fight! In the red corner: personal finance guru and guy who makes millions by making poorer people feel bad about their debt, Dave "how's your retirement fund looking?" Ramsey. And in the blue corner: with a much lighter pocketbook but much heavier t-shirt collection, Dan "alright let's see it" McClellan. What could a Bible scholarship show possibly have to say about a personal finance guy, you might ask. Well, Mr. Ramsey styles himself a Christian personal finance guy, and in that capacity makes some pretty interesting claims. So, while we are not qualified to check him on his finance advice, when he veers into our lane, he's fair game. And boy, did that guy veer! Then, the Deuteronomist abides. There may be some ten dollar words ahead (words that Dan Beecher may or may not be able to pronounce), but don't let that fool you: the Deuteronomistic history is actually fascinating. ---- HEY! TICKETS FOR THE FIRST LEG OF THE DATA OVER DOGMA TOUR ARE NOW ON SALE! To get yours, go here: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/the-grand-data-over-dogma-book-launch-tour/ For early access to an ad-free version of every episode of Data Over Dogma, exclusive content, and the opportunity to support our work, please consider becoming a monthly patron at: https://www.patreon.com/DataOverDogma      Follow us on the various social media places: https://www.facebook.com/DataOverDogmaPod https://www.twitter.com/data_over_dogma Have you pre-ordered Dan McClellan's upcoming book The Bible Says So yet??? https://static.macmillan.com/static/smp/bible-says-so-9781250347466/?fbclid=IwY2xjawGLTkpleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHQY4Ahs0Hi289IcnsQMh_0OAVf3oGefyUsWkLjhfB8OF8nio1fmroJbXxA_aem_v_4sISp8Zt43zsKfDjx1aA Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Wrestling With The Future
WHO WROTE THE BIBLE?

Wrestling With The Future

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2024 84:50


Who REALLY Wrote The Bible?   WHO WROTE THE BIBLE? Over centuries, billions of people have read the Bible. Scholars have spent their lives studying it, while rabbis, ministers and priests have focused on interpreting, teaching and preaching from its pages. As the sacred text for two of the world's leading religions, Judaism and Christianity, as well as other faiths, the Bible has also had an unmatched influence on literature—particularly in the Western world. It has been translated into nearly 700 languages, and while exact sales figures are hard to come by, it's widely considered to be the world's best-selling book. But despite the Bible's undeniable influence, mysteries continue to linger over its origins. Even after nearly 2,000 years of its existence, and centuries of investigation by biblical scholars, we still don't know with certainty who wrote its various texts, when they were written or under what circumstances. Old Testament: The Single Author Theory The Old Testament, or Hebrew Bible, narrates the history of the people of Israel over about a millennium, beginning with God's creation of the world and humankind, and contains the stories, laws and moral lessons that form the basis of religious life for both Jews and Christians. For at least 1,000 years, both Jewish and Christian tradition held that a single author wrote the first five books of the Bible—Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy—which together are known as the Torah (Hebrew for “instruction”) and the Pentateuch (Greek for “five scrolls”). That single author was believed to be Moses, the Hebrew prophet who led the Israelites out of captivity in Egypt and guided them across the Red Sea toward the Promised Land. Yet nearly from the beginning, readers of the Bible observed that there were things in the so-called Five Books of Moses that Moses himself could not possibly have witnessed: His own death, for example, occurs near the end of Deuteronomy. A volume of the Talmud, the collection of Jewish laws recorded between the 3rd and 5th centuries A.D., dealt with this inconsistency by explaining that Joshua (Moses' successor as leader of the Israelites) likely wrote the verses about Moses' death. “That's one opinion among many,” says Joel Baden, a professor at Yale Divinity School and author of The Composition of the Pentateuch: Renewing the Documentary Hypothesis. “But they're already asking the question—was it possible or not possible for [Moses] to have written them?” By the time the Enlightenment began in the 17th century, most religious scholars were more seriously questioning the idea of Moses' authorship, as well as the idea that the Bible could possibly have been the work of any single author. Those first five books were filled with contradictory, repetitive material, and often seemed to tell different versions of the Israelites' story even within a single section of text. As Baden explains, the “classic example” of this confusion is the story of Noah and the flood (Genesis 6:9). “You read along and you say, I don't know how many animals Noah took on the ark with him,” he says. “In this sentence it says two of every animal. In this sentence, he takes two of some animals and 14 of any animals.” Similarly, the text records the length of the flood as 40 days in one place, and 150 days in another. The Old Testament: Various Schools of Authors To explain the Bible's contradictions, repetitions and general idiosyncrasies, most scholars today agree that the stories and laws it contains were communicated orally, through prose and poetry, over centuries. Starting around the 7th century B.C., different groups, or schools, of authors wrote them down at different times, before they were at some point (probably during the first century B.C.) combined into the single, multi-layered work we know today. Of the three major blocks of source material that scholars agree comprise the Bible's first five books, the first was believed to have been written by a group of priests, or priestly authors, whose work scholars designate as “P.” A second block of source material is known as “D”—for Deuteronomist, meaning the author(s) of the vast majority of the book of Deuteronomy. “The two of them are not really related to each other in any significant way,” Baden explains, “except that they're both giving laws and telling a story of Israel's early history.” According to some scholars, including Baden, the third major block of source material in the Torah can be divided into two different, equally coherent schools, named for the word that each uses for God: Yahweh and Elohim. The stories using the name Elohim are classified as “E,” while the others are called “J” (for Jawhe, the German translation of Yahweh). Other scholars don't agree on two complete sources for the non-priestly material. Instead, says Baden, they see a much more gradual process, in which material from numerous smaller sources was layered together over a longer period of time. New Testament: Who Wrote the Gospels? Just as the Old Testament chronicles the story of the Israelites in the millennium or so leading up to the birth of Jesus Christ, the New Testament records Jesus's life, from his birth and teachings to his death and later resurrection, a narrative that forms the fundamental basis of Christianity. Beginning around A.D. 70, about four decades after Jesus's crucifixion (according to the Bible), four anonymously written chronicles of his life emerged that would become central documents in the Christian faith. Named for Jesus's most devoted earthly disciples, or apostles—Matthew, Mark, Luke and John—the four canonical Gospels were traditionally thought to be eyewitness accounts of Jesus's life, death and resurrection. But for more than a century, scholars have generally agreed that the Gospels, like many of the books of the New Testament, were not actually written by the people to whom they are attributed. In fact, it seems clear that the stories that form the basis of Christianity were first communicated orally, and passed down from generation to generation, before they were collected and written down. “Names are attached to the titles of the Gospels (‘the Gospel according to Matthew'),” writes Bible scholar Bart Ehrman in his book Jesus, Interrupted. “But these titles are later additions to the Gospels, provided by editors and scribes to inform readers who the editors thought were the authorities behind the different versions.” Traditionally, 13 of the 27 books of the New Testament were attributed to Paul the Apostle, who famously converted to Christianity after meeting Jesus on the road to Damascus and wrote a series of letters that helped spread the faith throughout the Mediterranean world. But scholars now agree on the authenticity of only seven of Paul's epistles: Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, Philemon. These are believed to have been written between A.D. 50-60, making them the earliest known evidence for Christianity. Authors of the later epistles may have been followers of Paul, who used his name to lend authenticity to the works. By the 4th century A.D., Christianity had been established as the dominant religion in the Western world, and the New and Old Testaments as its most sacred texts. In the centuries to come, the Bible would only become more central to the lives and faiths of millions of people around the world, despite the mystery surrounding its origins and the ongoing, complex debate over its authorship.   

Sacrilegious Discourse - Bible Study for Atheists
Jeremiah Wrap Up: Bible Study BY Atheists

Sacrilegious Discourse - Bible Study for Atheists

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2024 37:19


Get ready to raise your goblets of skepticism as we toast to the end of our biblical bender with the prophet of doom, Jeremiah! In this no-holds-barred episode, we're waving goodbye to good ol' Jeremiah and his rollicking rollercoaster ride through prophecy, exile, and the divine dramedy of ancient Judah. This is "Jeremiah Wrap Up" – the podcast episode where we unravel the tangled mess of edits, additions, and divine threats that somehow constitute the book of Jeremiah.As self-appointed apostles of atheism, we've dutifully slogged through 52 chapters of fire-and-brimstone tirades and unearthed the so-called 'wisdom' that Jeremiah served up to the Jews in Babylon. It's a tale of idol-worshipping baddies, geopolitical soap operas, and a God who has a penchant for overreacting. So buckle up, non-believers, as we dive headfirst into the good book's saga of celestial temper tantrums and mortals just trying to catch a break.From the ashes of Assyria's fall to the not-so-surprising rise of Babylon, we've dissected the supposed prophecies of Jeremiah and held them up to the harsh light of historical scrutiny. Spoiler alert: When you're the bearer of bad news in ancient times, you get a book named after you! And, of course, what's a Jeremiah jamboree without mentioning the Deuteronomist fan club and their penchant for historical revisionism?Did we mention the trivia challenge? That's right; we're testing your recall of all things Jeremiah with a pop quiz that's more challenging than explaining the plot of Lost. It's the perfect chance to show off your biblical book smarts or just play along and laugh at our attempts to remember which king set the parchment ablaze (because who doesn't love a little bit of light sacrilege with their sacred texts?).As we lay Jeremiah to rest, we reflect on his forty years of biblical buzzkill that have shaped the Judeo-Christian narrative – kind of like Moses, but with less parting seas and more tearing robes. And if you think this is where the contradictions end, think again! We've got a teaser for our upcoming "You're Always Wrong" episode that promises to dissect the discrepancies with the glee of a kid at a skeptics' summer camp.So, if you've been dying to get the dirt on ancient idols, the headaches of exile, and prophecies that are about as clear as mud, you're in the right place. Thanks for joining us on this irreverent romp through religious history – your company has been more delightful than a Canaanite wine festival. Don't miss out on the next leg of our godless journey through the Bible. It's going to be epic, or at least epically snarky.Join us on DISCORD: https://discord.gg/8RwwMrb5zKSkip the ads by joining Patreon https://patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourseThank you for stopping by Sacrilegious Discourse - Bible Study BY Atheists!Check out these links for more information about our podcast and merchandise:Our Homepage: https://sacrilegiousdiscourse.com/. Join Acast+ to enjoy our podcast adfree! https://plus.acast.com/s/sacrilegiousiscourse. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Books of Kings
36- You Have Mocked the Lord

Books of Kings

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2023 127:06


2 Kings 19 records the most astonishing miracle in the Books of Kings. In 701 BC, an “angel of the Lord” descended upon Jerusalem and slaughtered 185,000 Assyrian soldiers, lifting Sennacherib's siege of the city.  Incredibly, the angel's destruction of Sennacherib's army is perhaps the most well-documented miracle in the Old Testament, with the Deuteronomist's account finding support or corroboration in Egyptian, Babylonian, and Assyrian sources. Had the Assyrians succeeded in taking Jerusalem, the entire Kingdom of Judah—and, with it, all worship of the God of Jacob—would have been erased from the pages of history.

The Third Hour Podcast
#43. Collapse

The Third Hour Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2023 68:49


The final chapters of Kings cover two collapses as Assyria defeats Israel and Babylon defeats Judah. Interspersed with these disasters are accounts of kings both righteous and wicked — according to the Deuteronomist, that is. Join the Third Hour Podcast as we dig into the authorship and history of these twin collapses.

The Third Hour Podcast
#39. Solomon

The Third Hour Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2023 74:34


The tale of King Solomon has inspired countless interpretations, filled with wisdom narratives about divided babies and flattering visits from the Queen of Sheba. But the story that comes to us is filled with editorializing from our good friend the Deuteronomist. Join the Third Hour Podcast as we dig into the realities of Solomon's court.

king solomon deuteronomist
The Third Hour Podcast
#25. Allotments

The Third Hour Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2023 31:41


It's time for everybody's favorite scriptural topic — land allotments! The second half of the Book of Joshua is markedly less thrilling than the first, parceling out land to the various tribes of Israel. Fortunately, we're also taking the time to discuss the origins of the tribal system and how to cope with the Deuteronomist's peculiar approach to history-making.

israel allotment deuteronomist
Sacrilegious Discourse - Bible Study for Atheists
1 Chronicles Chapters 26 - 29 Q&A

Sacrilegious Discourse - Bible Study for Atheists

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2022 19:30


Husband and Wife cover questions about why the Chronicler was so in love with David. Turns out the Deuteronomist and the Chronicler were writing at cross purposes, to entirely different audiences. While this makes sense, history's speaking, it doesn't excuse the fact that the Chronicler is a total snooze-fest who is all up David's butt.Skip the ads by joining Acast+ https://plus.acast.com/s/6331d364470c7900137bb57dThank you for stopping by Sacrilegious Discourse - Bible Study for Atheists!Check out these links for more information about our podcast and merchandise:Our Homepage: https://sacrilegiousdiscourse.com/Help support us by subscribing on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sacrilegiousdiscourse Join Acast+ to enjoy our podcast adfree and get EARLY access to our episodes! https://plus.acast.com/s/sacrilegious-discourse-bible-study-for-atheists. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Third Hour Podcast
#21. Shema

The Third Hour Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2022 59:05


Meet the Deuteronomist! The final authorial school of the Torah brings an entirely new way of looking at scripture, and the Third Hour Podcast investigates how it modifies what's come before.

torah shema deuteronomist
Between The Lines
46 - Devarim with Rabbi Shoshanah Cohen

Between The Lines

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 18:16


Rabbi Shoshana Cohen uncovers some of the key trends towards secularisation that we encounter with the Deuteronomist authors and find throughout the Book of Devarim.Rabbi Shoshana Cohen is SHI Senior Faculty and Director of Campus Engagement for the Hevruta Gap-Year Program. In this role she serves as a faculty member, teacher, and mentor for North American gap-year students studying in Israel, prepares them for Jewish life in college, and supports them after they return to their campuses in North America. She was also a member of Cohort II of the Created Equal Fellowship. Prior to coming to Hartman Shoshana was a senior faculty member at the Conservative Yeshiva in Jerusalem for over a decade where she taught Talmud, Midrash and Gender Studies. She has served as scholar-in-residence in communities across the US.Shoshana was the educational director of ATZUM's Takum, a social justice beit midrash housed at the CY. She has completed advanced studies at Hebrew University, Matan and the Hartman Institute and has rabbinic ordination from Rabbi Daniel Landes. She is a founding member of Reshut haRabim, the Jerusalem Forum for Jewish Renewal Organizations. Lecturing in Hebrew and in English she has been on the faculty of the Drisha Institute, the Hartman Girl's High School, Yeshivat Talpiot, and Yeshivat Hadar. 

To Know Him: Come Follow Me
Come Follow Me - (July 11-17) 2 Kings 17-19, "He Trusted in the God of Israel" ft. Kevin Hinckley

To Know Him: Come Follow Me

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2022 28:00


To Know Him: Come Follow MeJoin us this week as Kevin Hinckley shares thought-provoking Christ-centered takeaways from the story of Hezekiah and Josiah in 2 Kings 17-25.0:00 Intro0:47 Kevin Hinckley2:42 Historical Background4:59 Assyria's Conquering Strategy9:26 Hezekiah's Tunnel15:25 Northern Kingdom Bring their Idolatry to Judah17:22 Deuteronomists18:59 Lehi's Preaching To Learn More About the Deuteronomistshttps://byustudies.byu.edu/article/is-the-bible-reliable-a-case-study/https://rsc.byu.edu/ascending-mountain-lord/swines-blood-broken-serpents-rejection-rehabilitation-worship-old-testamentAlso found on:Apple Podcast, Google Podcast, Spotify, Amazon Music, Stitcher, iHeartRadio, Deezer, Castbox, Podcast Addict, PodchaserCheck out our website for more Come Follow Me takeaways for the whole family!https://www.toknowhimcfm.com/https://www.facebook.com/ToKnowHimComeFollowMehttps://www.facebook.com/groups/897234920985405https://www.instagram.com/toknowhim.cfm/

Audio podcast of the Interpreter Foundation
Interpreter Radio Show — September 12, 2021

Audio podcast of the Interpreter Foundation

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 112:50


  You can listen to or download the September 12th broadcast of the Interpreter Radio Show below. It will also be included in our podcast feed (https://interpreterfoundation.org/feeds/podcast). This episode is hosted by Terry Hutchinson, John Gee and Kevin Christensen. In this episode, our hosts discussed recent essays on the Deuteronomist movement in the Old Testament […] The post Interpreter Radio Show — September 12, 2021 first appeared on The Interpreter Foundation.

old testament radio show interpreter deuteronomist terry hutchinson
Audio podcast of the Interpreter Foundation
Interpreter Radio Show — September 12, 2021

Audio podcast of the Interpreter Foundation

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 112:50


  You can listen to or download the September 12th broadcast of the Interpreter Radio Show below. It will also be included in our podcast feed (https://interpreterfoundation.org/feeds/podcast). This episode is hosted by Terry Hutchinson, John Gee and Kevin Christensen. In this episode, our hosts discussed recent essays on the Deuteronomist movement in the Old Testament […] The post Interpreter Radio Show — September 12, 2021 first appeared on The Interpreter Foundation.

old testament radio show interpreter deuteronomist terry hutchinson
Atheist Bible Study
Deuteronomy 1: The Flashback Episode

Atheist Bible Study

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2021 55:25


This week we cover Deuteronomy chapters 1-12. Moses gets nostalgic and retells the same stories from Exodus and Numbers, Yahweh commands the Israelites to love him (pretty sure that's not how love works), and Ashton can't help but do some more math. Most importantly, we'll discuss the historical context of Deuteronomy and what motivates the Deuteronomist to rewrite old myths.Donate to https://www.rebuildingalliance.org. They advocate for and provide financial support to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.You can also learn more about the history of Zionism and the Israeli government's treatment of Palestinian people from Ilan Pappe's The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine. You can find it at your local library or buy from your local black-owned book store.Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=W2VPJLRC9FTG4)

City Life Church Luton
Red Thread Podcast Episode 3: In the Beginning

City Life Church Luton

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2021


In the 3rd episode of the Red Thread Podcast, Neil and Harry take us on a fairly brisk but in depth look through some key moments in the creation stories, and thoughts about what this means for our ideas of Scripture.Things we mentioned that you might want to look up: Genesis - the first book of the BibleCreationism - Belief that the universe was created in 6 or 7 days. This comes in a variety of flavours, with people thinking ‘day’ means either a literal day or just ‘a period of time’. What all Creationists share is a commitment to the ‘literal’ truth of Genesis 1-2:4.Documentary Hypothesis - The theory that the first five books of the Bible are made up of earlier written documents. The editors of the Torah took these documents and wove them into a single text. The theory was introduced in the 19th century by Julius Wellhausen. Though the theory has started to be picked apart by scholars, the basic insight remains that the Torah is made up of earlier stories, passed on in songs, liturgy, written sources and oral traditions. There’s a lot of discussion about all of this at the moment, so when I talk about it in the podcast, I’m mostly giving one version.Priestly source - When Wellhausen came up with the Documentary Hypothesis he said there were 4 written documents from which the Torah was made. The Priestly source is one of them. Even though people doubt the existence of all 4 of these sources now, they still think the Priestly source might have existed.Jahwist - Another of the 4 sources Wellhausen talked about (the other 2 where the Elohist and the Deuteronomist, usually shortened to their first letters, so JEPD).‘Seams’ - The bits in the Bible where two of the ‘sources’ are joined. Sometimes an editor will have added a sentence or a few words to smooth the transition. Worth looking for, I think we’re supposed to notice the seams.Myths from Mesopotamian by Stephanie Dalley - a book I mentioned which has all these older stories we’ve been talking about. There are easier versions. For a start, to get into this material, I’d go for the Penguin version of the Gilgamesh Epic. Enuna Elish - A Babylonian poem about the rise of the god Marduk to being the top god at Babylon. It contains a section describing how Marduk created the universe, and Genesis 1 echoes it at several points. It’s in the Dalley book just recommended.Tiamat - A goddess in Babylonian mythology. The ‘baddy’ in Enuma ElishQingu - Tiamat’s main general. His blood, mixed with clay, is used to make humanity in Enuma Elish.Canaanite - the people just to the north of the Israelites. The poems/stories of the Canaanites can be read in Ugaritic Narrative Poetry by Simon B. ParkerBaal - a god in Canaanite mythology. A storm god.King James Version - An older translation of the Bible, from the 16th century. Was the standard translation for several hundred years.

I Don't Know How to Live
Minisode: Six Snake Statistics

I Don't Know How to Live

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2020 32:07


The Deuteronomist and Tweester go over six snake statistics to better understand our slithering neighbors. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/idontknowhowtolive/support

snake statistics deuteronomist
I Don't Know How to Live
Exploring Biblical Stories: Genesis Part 2

I Don't Know How to Live

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2020 70:07


The Deuteronomist and Tweester break down the second creation story in Genesis featuring Adam and Eve. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/idontknowhowtolive/support

Worship and the Word from Clinton UMC
February 16, 2020 - Life and Death Are Set Before You

Worship and the Word from Clinton UMC

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2020 15:59


The Deuteronomist (30: 15-20) reminds us that following God requires us to make choices to do good.

god life and death deuteronomist
I Don't Know How to Live
Exploring Biblical Stories: Genesis Part 1

I Don't Know How to Live

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2020 54:39


The Deuteronomist and Tweester dive into Genesis to break down the creation stories in this 1st episode of a 2 parter. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/idontknowhowtolive/support

I Don't Know How to Live
Minisode: Fox Facts Five

I Don't Know How to Live

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2019 17:08


The Deuteronomist and Tweester give foxes their due love in this minisode spinoff from the Sampson episode. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/idontknowhowtolive/support

sampson deuteronomist
four cubits and a span
appropriation and manifestation (2019/04/21)

four cubits and a span

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2019


What happened at Sinai? This question faces us throughout the Deuteronomy narrative, and this week is our introduction to the Deuteronomist's retelling of the Exodus tradition. In John's gospel we're facing another perspective on John's Christology and theology - what are we to make of the Comforter passage?Read transcriptRead more »

I Don't Know How to Live
Exploring Biblical Stories: The Book Of Mark

I Don't Know How to Live

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2018 95:49


The Deuteronomist is back to talk to Tweester about the book of Mark and the stories and themes contained therein. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/idontknowhowtolive/support

biblical stories deuteronomist
four cubits and a span
judgment and responsibility (2018/09/16)

four cubits and a span

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2018


Continuing our recent theme of the relationship between the Bible and history, King Josiah is front and center for the Deuteronomist this week - though God's response is objectively surprising (if literarily inevitable). Ezekiel is doing his Masterpiece Theatre thing again, and Luke cuts short a quotation to throw wide the doors of God's mercy.Read transcriptRead more »

four cubits and a span
retribution and conscience (2018/08/26)

four cubits and a span

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2018


As we continue to engage with the historical storytelling of the Deuteronomist, we're confronted with whiny cry-baby King Ahab and a sneak attack by the challenge of divine retribution. Jeremiah has a screed against Moab and a peek into pre-exilic Israelite religion. But mostly we're spending this week with the apostle Paul, talking about sex, marriage, and the Christian conscience.Read transcriptRead more »

I Don't Know How to Live
Exploring Biblical stories : Samson

I Don't Know How to Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2018 76:43


The Deuteronomist joins Tweester in exploring and discussing the Biblical tale of Samson. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/idontknowhowtolive/support

Sermons at First Christian Church of Puyallup (Disciples of Christ)
021217 – Choose Life: Looking Back to Move Forward

Sermons at First Christian Church of Puyallup (Disciples of Christ)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2017 22:51


Revisiting the stories of our past can shed light on our current situation. In our Scripture reading from Deuteronomy 30, the author looks back into his people’s founding story and finds guidance for the challenges facing his own generation. Taking the Deuteronomist’s example, Pastor Nancy examines a defining event in the history of Puyallup, Washington,... Read more

Cantus Firmus
A Priest and a Deuteronomist Walk Into a Bar – the Documentary Hypothesis

Cantus Firmus

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2016 35:31


We examine the Documentary Hypothesis of the Pentateuch–the idea that the first five books of the Bible did not originate with Moses but were originally […]

OnScript
Alison Joseph – Portrait of the Kings

OnScript

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2016 54:32


Episode: Take a journey into the heart of the Deuteronomist to discover more about the king after God’s own heart through the eyes of the book of Kings. Matt Lynch interviews Alison Joseph about […] The post Alison Joseph – Portrait of the Kings first appeared on OnScript.

OnScript
Alison Joseph – Portrait of the Kings

OnScript

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2016 54:32


Episode: Take a journey into the heart of the Deuteronomist to discover more about the king after God’s own heart through the eyes of the book of Kings. Matt Lynch interviews Alison Joseph about […]

History in the Bible
1.23 God's Historian: The Deuteronomist

History in the Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2016 25:20


Modern scholars have identified a single school behind all the books from Deuteronomy to Kings. This school wrote the histories of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, putting its own theological slant on that history.

Old Testament I
OT602 Lesson 08

Old Testament I

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2015 22:00


Learn how Wellhausen's view of Israel's history is a move away from free and uninhibited worship to a stilted and lifeless religion based on written legislation. Wellhausen is remembered most for the idea of the Documentary Hypothesis or JEDP (Jahwist, Elohist, Deuteronomist, and Priestly) as the source critical understanding of the Old Testament. Wellhausen holds that the Penteteuch is an amalgamation of these four sources and it is up to the scholar to identify and sort the books into these categories. JEDP became an issue that sent a rip current into the life of the church and academe.

St. Irenaeus Ministries
Genesis 02 - The Documentary Hypothesis and Its Shortcomings

St. Irenaeus Ministries

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2013 44:27


Much of the scholarship of the book of Genesis from the 18th century to the early 20th century was based on Wellhausen's Documentary Hypothesis that the Torah was collated from multiple sources based on various factions. The evidence for this comes from the type of content in portions of the Torah, and in particular the words used for the name of God. The theory proposes that there were four authors of all of Torah, the Jahwist author, whose writings are theorized to be very personal, at around the time of Solomon in 950 BC, the Elohist author, who was supposed to be much more philosophical and less personal, writing about 100 years later, the Deuteronomist author writing at the time of Josiah's reforms in 600 BC to support the reforms, and the Priestly author, who is supposed to be concerned with laws and rituals, writing after the end of the Babylonian Exile in 500 BC, and all of these various sources were later reconciled by an editor or editors. Please note that this is all conjecture and not endorsed by the Catholic Church. No hard evidence for such documents exists, and similar differences exist in the writings of other ancient Semitic cultures. In practice, this theory tends to prevent a deeper faith.

Sermon Series - AlbertMohler.com
Introduction to Genesis

Sermon Series - AlbertMohler.com

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2013 40:52


This morning we have the privilege of beginning a new book. In terms of ministries of expository preaching and teaching, it is often the case that time flows by teaching rather than by the chronology of the calendar. I was just recently in California with the ministry of Dr. John MacArthur who has preached through the course of 40 years through the entire New Testament, word by word. And when people talk about when they were born there, they will say I was born during the Gospel of John. And we got married during the epistle to the Romans. And our children went to high school during the Gospel of Luke. That's the way it works. In the ministry of Dr. WA Criswell, at the First Baptist Church of Dallas, people would say, “I joined the church during Exodus, and that my mom and dad came and joined the church during Isaiah. An expository ministry is measured by text more than by time. And I say that as a word of warning. We are entering into the book of Genesis, and we are entering into 50 chapters of the book of Genesis. Children will be conceived and born, and may well enter into higher education, by the time we find ourselves at the end of this book. And we need to say right up front, that's the plan. To rush through Genesis would be to miss the point of going word by word and verse by verse through this book. As we consider what it means to begin in the beginning, we need to recognize that there is a hunger on the part of any thinking person to understand exactly what the book of Genesis will address for us. Every worldview has to have an account of how things came to be. This is one of the most fundamental human needs. This is something we're going to track as we follow along, not only in the doctrine of creation, but in the other absolutely fundamentally important truths that are revealed in the book of Genesis. Without the book of Genesis, we would not know the who in terms of creation. Without the book of Genesis, we would not know the how, but more importantly, we would not know the who and the why. We would not know for instance, what has happened to human beings without the account of the fall that we find in Genesis chapter three. We would not understand a great deal of the confusion that marks humanity without the account of the Tower of Babel. We would not understand God's covenantal promises to Israel without his doings with Abraham. And that is just what we might say comes in the first half or first third of the book of Genesis, with far more to come. Every worldview has to have an account of why there is something, rather than nothing. Every worldview, every thinking mind, has to rest upon some assumption, some revelation, some claim as to how things have come to be. And by the way, this starts very, very early. There was a book recently written by an evolutionary scientist who is trying to answer the question, why is it that very small children tend, by the very disposition of their minds, to disbelieve in evolution and to believe in intelligent creation. And this scientist thought, “well, we're gonna have to answer this question because it turns out that children are not blank slates when it comes to something like creation.” And this is true of children. Not only those who have Christian parents, and are raised in Christian homes, and are taught the book of Genesis. It is not just children who've been exposed to the storyline of scripture with creation, fall, redemption and recreation. It's children in general, it's children across cultures, it's children in secular homes and in Christian homes. Children are not naturally born evolutionists. So this evolutionary scientist, perplexed by this reality, did a study and discovered that, this is gonna be shocking to you, that when they see something, assume that someone made it. Now, how do they come to that conclusion? They come to that conclusion because just about everything they see is explained by the fact that someone made it. Who built the house, somebody built it. How did this building come to be? Somebody designed it, somebody built it, somebody furnished it. How did all this happen to be? How did the park come to be? How did my school come to be? How did all these things come to be? And then when they look at the world, they look at what we would call the created order. They see exactly the same thing. Nothing I know happened by accident. Not only that, children, and this is a very insightful point of her research, children very early assume that the greater the detail of the object, the greater the intelligence of the one who created it. Now, where in the world will they get that idea? Well, they know what they can build. You give them blocks, they'll build a house, but they're not gonna live in it. They'll look at the house in which they live, they're rational creatures, it's a lot more complex. It requires knowledge they don't have. It requires strength they don't have. Needless to say, it requires financial resources they don't have. They get to live in it. They know they didn't build it, but they trust that someone built it. When they look at the world, they come up with the same understanding. Every intelligent mind asks the question, as did the ancient philosopher: why is there something rather than nothing?Genesis begins the biblical story at this point. As we look at the opening of the book of Genesis, we recognize that, as we are looking at the first words of the book of Genesis, we are looking at the first words of the Bible. Now, in what sense is that important to us? Well, it's important to us because we need to recognize that the Bible is not an accidental ordering of books. The canon of scripture, the 66 books of the Bible, the 39 books of the Old Testament, the 27 books of the New Testament, these are not randomly arranged. And when you think about it, each one of the testaments is arranged in the way that genuinely does make the most sense to us in terms of the storyline of the Bible. The New Testament, for example, does not begin with a book of Acts. It does not begin with the epistles of Paul. It begins with the four Gospels because we cannot understand what the New Testament is about unless we begin with the promise of Christ, the birth of Christ, and the earthly ministry of Christ. And only then are we able to turn to the birth of the Church in the book of Acts, and the spread of the gospel in that same book, and then the life of the churches, and instruction of the churches that follows, and all that continues. And of course, the book of Revelation at the end is the book that is most intensely, although not uniquely, but it is the most intensely focused upon those things yet to come. And as we come to understand the New Testament, we see that thus there is a natural order between the Gospels, and then history, and then pastoral exhortation, and finally the prophetic apocalyptic text that comes at the end of the book of Revelation. So also in the Old Testament, where would we begin? We divide the Old Testament into certain kinds of literature. First of all, the Pentateuch, the five books that are written by Moses, the five books of the law, that which is known primarily amongst the Jews as Torah. There the story begins. Then after that our historical books, beginning, of course, with Joshua and following through the historical books that deal with the monarchy of Israel, then there is the wisdom literature and that is the Psalter of Israel. And of course it includes also the book of Job and the Song of Solomon and Ecclesiastes, the book of Proverbs, and most centrally the Psalms themselves. Then follow the prophetic literature, which is the rest of the Old Testament divided between the Major Prophets and the Minor Prophets. Now, when I heard that as a boy, I heard that like the major leagues and the minor leagues. That is not the case. We're not talking about the importance of the prophets. We're talking about the length of their books. The Major Prophets are named major simply because of the size of the books, and the Minor Prophets, known collectively as the book of the 12, are grouped together at the end. So what we have here is a natural way of beginning, and we're also dealing with those things that not only in terms of temporal priority, but of logical priority, come first. We can't imagine starting the New Testament with the book of Acts, because how can you begin, for instance, with the day of Pentecost when you don't know what has come before it? How in the world could we begin anywhere else in terms of the book of God in the Old Testament than with the book of Genesis? Because if we didn't begin here, we'd have to keep coming back to this over and over again, because it would be impossible to talk of anything that follows without making constant reference explaining questions that we should have explained before. That's why in the wisdom of the Scripture, we have Genesis up front. Genesis, of course, as we just said, is one of five books of the Pentateuch. Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. These function much like the Gospels in the New Testament. They are the fundamental set of books that establish the storyline to which everything that follows is absolutely accountable. When you think about the five books of Moses, the five books of the Pentateuch, without them, you really don't know how in the world the storyline is going to work. You don't know what's come before, and you really don't even understand the promises that have been made that are yet to be fulfilled. As a matter of fact, if you just look at the number of words in the Old Testament that are invested in the Pentateuch, and then you think about the chronology of time that is invested in the Pentateuch, the Torah, the first five books of the Bible, then you'll recognize that so much of what we know, not only about the Old Testament, but of course about the entire Scripture is found right here in these books. And in particular, in the book of Genesis, the word Genesis comes from the Latin meaning origin, or it's literally in the beginning, the Genesis of all things. This is how it has to start. We have to begin in the beginning. When we look at the book of Genesis, we need to settle a couple of issues up front, including the issue of its authorship. Now here there are controversial issues that have only become controversial in the last 200 years. If you take 20 centuries of church history, if you go from the book of Acts until the time of the dawn of the 21st century, for 18 of those 20 centuries, no one seriously questioned that Moses was himself the human author of the first five books of the Bible. The rise of historical criticism, and especially of that which is known as higher criticism of liberal biblical criticism, an anti-supernaturalistic attempt to understand the Bible as a human historical artifact, about 200 years ago, there arose arguments that Moses didn't write the Pentateuch and that Moses couldn't have written the Pentateuch. Now, here we come across some arguments. So we're just gonna have to consider them head on. Now the main argument does not come from where the middle school class would go. I can remember knowing that it was believed that Moses wrote these books. And then the first time I read through the Bible cover to cover, and I did it from Genesis to Revelation, I just figured that's the way you're supposed to do it. I still think, by the way, that's a good way to do it. I was about 13 and I got to the end of Deuteronomy and it talks about the death of Moses. And I thought, how do you write about his own death? That is the middle school objection to the Mosaic authorship. And the simple answer to that is it was completed by someone who finished the work, documenting the death of Moses, and that that's not really a problem. That's a middle school problem. The larger problem is in the rise of historical criticism, there arose the theory that what we have in the Pentateuch, in the first five books of the Bible, is not the work of any single inspired author that was written contemporaneously with the time of Moses. But rather what we have is the work of four different historical sources each with his own political agenda. And what we have is an edited colation that is known as the Graf-Wellhausen theory of the Pentateuch, dividing the five books into four different strains: J, E, P, and D. And that's the Deuteronomist, the Priestly, the Elohist, and the Jahwehist. And suggesting that what you have here is an edited, politically motivated compilation of things that emerge, at least many of them, from far after the centuries after the time of Moses. Now, I say that just in order to say that if you were to go to any liberal, biblical seminary, anywhere in the modern world, they would tell you that that's exactly what the Pentateuch is. It is a human collection of different writings edited over time for different political purposes, some to support the monarchy, some to support the priestly class, the Deuteronomist limited to the purpose in Deuteronomy. And if you do that, and if you look at the Pentateuch in that way, and if you take that kind of approach, not only to the Pentateuch, but to the entire scripture as logically you must, then all you're gonna do when you read the Bible is read about the beliefs of ancient people. And all you're left with is an historical argument, that there were many people who lived thousands of years ago who actually believed things reflected in these texts. And what we would do is an archeological kind of study, a deconstructive literary exercise, in which we would try to say, alright, I think what they meant by this was they evidently believed that because of this reason, they wrote that for this purpose. But let me just remind you that if that's what you believe about the scripture, then all you're left with is the historical imagination and curiosity of what ancient people believed. We are not approaching the verse by verse, word by word, study of the book of Genesis because we are interested primarily in what ancient people believed. We are approaching this book because we believe that it is indeed the inerrant, infallible word of God that was indeed revealed by God to Moses.Now, understand that when you're talking about authorship, in this case, that in the scriptures there are different ways that authorship is attributed. For instance, you have books in which authorship is clearly irrelevant such as the book of Hebrews. When we went through that book verse by verse, we were reminded of the fact that we don't know who wrote Hebrews and evidently, since the Bible is sufficient, we're not needful of knowing who wrote the book of Hebrews because evidently we're to read the book of Hebrews without reference to any particular congregational cause. Evidently the Holy Spirit would have us to read the book of Hebrews without trying to understand what was happening in the timeline of the human inspired author at that time. Contrast that with Paul. Paul's letters are clearly marked. Paul identifies himself: “Paul, an apostle of the Lord, Jesus Christ.” And it is important in our understanding of the Pauline epistles, the Pauline letters, to know that Paul did write this. Paul will tell accounts of his own personal life and of his own personal testimony in his letters. And furthermore, it's important for us to know in the flow of the letters what was going on. When he writes to the Romans in Romans chapter one, “I long to be with you, but I've been hindered from coming to you.” We understand that that fits where, in the book of Acts, it tells us that he received a vision of a man from Macedonia who called him to Greece, prevented him, delayed him at least, from getting to Rome. And you understand, while evidently there, the authorship by the epistles identified to Paul, the Pauline authorship then becomes very important. That's certainly true also in a letter like Second Peter because Second Peter is making the point that what he relates, the inspired author, the human author of Second Peter says that “it is important that you know that I am an eyewitness of these things.” And thus, it's not just church tradition that identifies Peter as the author of Second Peter, Peter identifies himself as the author of Second Peter, and says, “You need to know I was there when it happened.” If Peter thus is not the author of second Peter, then whoever did write Second Peter lied. There is another form, however, of attributed authorship. And that fits what we're talking about here. And that comes down to this. We know that the books of Moses are rightly associated with the Mosaic authorship, not mostly because of anything found within Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, or Deuteronomy. We come to understand that within both the Old and the New Testament, the authorship of Moses is so assumed that, referring to Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy, the subsequent witnesses of scripture will refer to this as “Moses said.” So it's not there in the beginning. Genesis 1:1 does not begin “Moses, appointed by the one true and living God.” Rather, it simply begins, “In the beginning.” When we talk about the attribution of these five books of Moses, we know that this is clearly a link to Mosaic authorship and to Mosaic authority. This is our understanding of how to begin an understanding of the book of Genesis. Thus, we consider what we are about to confront in the text of the book of Genesis is that, which is the God inspired, word for word God-inspired text with which scripture, both in terms of the canon of scripture and the storyline of scripture begins. When you look at the actual text of Genesis, the first verse is one of the most familiar verses of all the scripture. It's short, it's poetic in its concision. It's not overly elaborate in terms of any use of words, and yet it encompasses the entire story. So in other words, it's almost as if the entire storyline of the Bible comes down to this first verse as being equivalent to getting the entire story underway with far more here than we might imagine in the economy of words. “In the beginning.” Where else would you start here? We have another problem: in the beginning of what? This isn't in the beginning of God. As we will learn in scripture, God doesn't have a beginning, but we have a beginning. Our story has a beginning. The story of the cosmos has a beginning. And isn't in the beginning God created himself. It's “in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” The storyline begins chronologically just the way, in our hearts and in our imagination, we want it to start. We don't want it to start at some subsequent point that will only make reference back to what happened in the beginning. We need to start right in the beginning. And the first words of God's inspired word begin right there “in the beginning.” The beginning is an interesting word because when you think about how to start a story, you start with some beginning.If you tell of who you are, if you start to tell your own autobiography, if you sit down next to someone on a plane and you just try to identify yourself, you have to start somewhere. And eventually, if you're gonna tell your story in any adequate way, you're gonna have to go back to your beginning. Well, where was your beginning? Well, I was born in Lakeland, Florida, October 19th, 1959. You've all been wondering about that. Lakeland, Florida, there in Polk County. And I was born. And that's the beginning of my story. By the way, even though I was there and I have paperwork to prove it, I have no living memory of the occasion. I'm dependent upon others to tell me in the beginning. However, you don't have to get very old until you realize that's not an adequate beginning because something happened before you. So as you're a child, you begin to push the beginning back. You discover that these huge people you know as your parents also had a beginning. Where were you born? And when? Prehistoric times it sounds like. But nonetheless you begin to understand, “My parents are both born in 1936 in Plan City, Florida. Just about 15 miles away. Seemed like a long time away when I was a little child. It's shorter than the distance between my home and Highview Baptist Church right now. But nonetheless, that's where they were born. I wasn't there. Then I have to take that on faith. They told me they were born in Plant City, Florida. Eventually, when doing a genealogical project, I saw their birth certificates. Low and behold, there is proof that they were born in Plant City, Florida, but I'm still taking it on faith. But then you come to understand that it doesn't go there. You go further and further and further and further back. I have a professional genealogical study of my paternal lineage going all the way back to the early 17th century in Basil, Switzerland, complete with marriage certificates and birth certificates and cemetery information and the ship's log of the ship thistle upon which my great, great, great, great, great, great grandfather came over from Switzerland and settled in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Amish family. I come to understand, at least that part of the family. But you know what? That's not even an adequate beginning because that only goes back to the early 17th century. That already implies there were 17 centuries prior to this. And not only that, there's time prior to that. So our beginning is problematic because we're never sure we can get far enough back. We just have to, at some point, trust there's enough beginning we can go forward. That's why if we had to have the genealogy traced for every one of us in every way we possibly could, in order to know who we are, most of us would never find out who we are. There's not enough documentation. Well, you think about the beginning of an organization, or you think about the beginning of a church. So someone says, “when was this church founded?” Well, it kind of depends on what you mean. This church was organized in Louisville, Kentucky to a certain date, but it was actually founded by the Lord Jesus Christ in Matthew chapter 16. It was actually inaugurated in the second chapter of the Book of Acts. So that's when this church was founded. It had a beginning. But the church as a story, before there was a church, in other words, the beginning's problematic for any of us. The beginning we're talking about here is not the beginning of God in which there's no beginning. It is rather the beginning of the cosmos, the storyline of creation. And here we find a very simple statement that the most important thing we come to understand is not a when, but a who. The central issue of Genesis 1:1 is who. “In the beginning,” introductory language, “God.” Now let's just assume that we're considering a condensed version of the scriptures. Back about 30 plus years ago, Reader's Digest, which was famous for condensing novels in other books, and putting them out in a very popular series of readers, a reader's digest of condensed books, decided to condense the Bible. It was a rather controversial project as you might imagine. One Christian magazine lampooned it by condensing the Bible down to a hilarious paragraph. And you realize it really can't be done. And the Reader's Digest's condensed Bible, despite the hopes of Reader's Digest, did not become a bestselling book. It just resists that kind of condensation. But you know, if you were to consider how to condense the Bible down to just a few statements, you could certainly imagine condensing the Bible down to, if you just had to, if you were running out of time, and you had to say what the Bible's about, you might go first to John 3:16, “For God to love the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him might not perish, but have everlasting life.” It certainly condenses the storyline of Jesus, the account of Jesus and the Gospels and the teaching of Jesus concerning why he came, and the meaning of his life, death, and resurrection. It's all right there. God's purpose in the incarnation is right there. But you know, you could say that everything in the Bible comes down actually to the first four words in the English translation of Genesis 1:1, “In the beginning, God.” Now the reason why that's important is this, not only is Genesis 1:1 primarily about the, who, the who explains everything that follows. Not everything that follows in Genesis, everything that follows, period. Because as the author, and as the originator, as the designer, and as the creator of all the cosmos, then, as BB Warfield, the famous Princeton theologian, said, “He by definition names it, claims it, and owns it, such that everything that follows follows from the fact that it's his.” He is the agent who creates in the beginning. God created the heavens and the earth. Now, another interesting thing here, of course, is if we were reading Genesis for the first time, if we don't know anything else about the storyline of scripture, and we don't know anything else about Christianity, or even if we didn't know anything about Judaism in terms of the Old Testament, and we just picked up this book and we read “In the beginning God created the heavens on the earth.” How would we know who this God is? Well, which God? Does it not strike you as something odd that it just says, “God.” By the time this was written, there were already various paganism and idolatries. There were already alternative accounts of creation and how the world came to be. The peoples around Israel had their own accounts. They had their own understanding. After all, we're talking about Moses here through whom this came to be written. And by the time you're talking about Moses, you're talking about the people of Israel in captivity to Pharaoh in Egypt, and the Egyptians had their own creation story. And they had their own collection of gods. And of course they're all around them, the Canaanite and all the others that as we shall see, Abraham certainly would have known. In fact, out of which Abraham himself came, they had their own creation stories. They had their own gods. Why the simplicity of this statement “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” God, is that enough? Well, here, we need to understand something else about the entire storyline of the Bible. The entire storyline of the Bible, beginning in Genesis 1:1, identifies the only God that matters as the God who created the heavens and the earth. As a matter of fact, what is going to distinguish Jehovah, YHWH, the God of Israel, is going to be that he actually did create all these things. He is the only uncreated being. Everything else is created. And when, last week, we were looking at Isaiah chapter 44 and the issue of idolatry, one of the things that became most clear, the folly of idolatry is in the fact that the idols are things that are made. God isn't made, He makes. So even though we have the simple statement “In the beginning God,” it's because the Holy Spirit would have us clearly to understand that the only God that is is the God who does this. And as more is revealed about him in his word that follows everything we will know then is tracked back to the fact that the God who exists, the one true God, is that God whom created the heavens and the earth. “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” Thus, the first thing we know about God is that he is the creator. And that is a title that he will retain throughout the entirety of the biblical canon. He is the one who creates. Remember your creator in the day of your youth. He again will claim of himself, “Did I not make you, Job?” at that great climactic conclusion to the book of Job. God will speak to Job and say, “Excuse me, let's remember the difference between us. Were you there when I created this? Were you there when I created that? Obviously, even Job is in the position of saying, “No, sir.” Which isn't even necessary. It's not even answered in scripture. It's so clear. But God says, “look, I was there. I did this. You look at that creature, I made that. You look at that artifact, that wonder of creation, I made that. Where were you? Which one of us is God? I'll tell you which one's God. It is the one who is creator, not the one who is created. “In the beginning God created.” You'll notice the singularity of this. God creates alone. He doesn't require others to be about his task of creation. What we will learn as we move forward through Genesis chapter one, and also as we look at Genesis chapter two, is that God will create verbally. He will speak. And when he speaks, it is created. He doesn't have to have minions and workers. He doesn't have a construction crew. He simply speaks and it is.“In the beginning God created.” Created is a verb. God is acting. One of the first things we learn about God is not only that he is the origin of all things, that he is the one who has created, and thus He is sovereign over all things. That establishes the fact that he owns all things, but it also makes very, very clear that he acts. God acts. God, not merely is, God acts. That becomes very important too. Because one of the things we will learn about his human creatures is that we are made in his image. And a part of what we're going to learn, that Genesis will reveal, is about human beings being made uniquely in God's image. We too, verb, we act. A part of what it means to be made in God's image is to be able to act. And by the way, also to create. We do create things. The problem is that we don't create in the same way that God creates. We create out of stuff. God creates the stuff. We're gonna learn, as we look through Genesis one, that it is essential to understand God's creation as ex nihilo. We'll talk about that. That is the Latin term, as the word “genesis” itself is a Latin term. That means out of nothing. He doesn't create out of stuff. He doesn't take preexisting stuff because nothing's preexisting except himself. He creates the stuff. “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” In other words, the totality of all there is. In the ancient cosmology, limited as they were in their prehistoric ignorance, they assumed that everything that was was either seen by looking down or looking up. In our advanced sophistication, so much wiser and accumulated so much knowledge and wisdom, since then having gained so much in our understanding we're in a different position. Except we're not. We still know that everything that is to be known in terms of creation is by looking down or looking up. In other words, it's here on this earth or it's out there in the heavens. In other words, our world picture may be more sophisticated because of our astronomical and scientific knowledge, but we're stuck in the same human predicament. We're looking up and we're looking down. God created the heavens. We look up everything and we see God has created. You put the Hubble telescope up there, which Moses didn't know about, and the Hubble telescope can look millions of light years out into the future, or I guess actually into the past. And what does it see? It sees the heavens. That's what it's looking at. In other words, there is no dimension other than this, the heavens and the earth. This is everything. He created everything that is. You look down, everything you see, God created. You look up, everything you see, God created. The distinction between the heavens and the earth is crucial here, but mostly because together they represent the totality of everything that is. The first verse of scripture tells us, most importantly, who: God. Which God? The God who does this, as we shall see. The only God who deserves to be called God. The God who will say, “bring no other gods before me.” The God who will say, “Where were you when I did this?” The God who will say, “Remember who I am. I am the creator of all things. I made it. I own it. I claim it. I rule it. It's mine.”In the beginning the God who already existed. In the beginning he created, he acted. He freely acted. Nothing was constraining him to have to create. No external force required him to create. He created because he freely willed to do so. And as we shall see, he tells us why he willed to do so. In the beginning, God created, he acted, he willed. He sovereignly created out of nothing, as we shall see, the heavens and the earth, everything that is. Now, just imagine where we would be if we did not have those few words. We wouldn't know the who. We wouldn't have a clue of how to know the why. We wouldn't know the what. We wouldn't know anything that is absolutely necessary to our understanding of the storyline of scripture. But now we know everything we need to know in the beginning. And now as we follow word by word, through the book of Genesis, we're gonna learn a great deal more. And we will be coming back time and time again, to Genesis 1:1, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.”Let's pray. Our father, we are so thankful that you have given us not only in this passage, but in your word, access to your truth. And otherwise we would never know. Father you have to tell us these things because we have no access to them but by the free and merciful gift of your revelation. Father, thank you for giving us Genesis. Thank you for giving us the entirety of scripture. But thank you this day for giving us this one short verse with which the entire canon of your word begins. In order that we can understand where to begin in the beginning. And  father, we are so thankful to be reminded by this text, informed by this text, instructed by this text, that we begin not with a when, but, most importantly, with a who. And so father, we end by praising you as the one who created us and created all things and rules over us and rules over all things. Father we conclude by thanking you that we know you not only as creator, but as redeemer and thus in thankfulness. We come to you in the name of Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. Amen. Look forward to being back with you next Sunday for verse two.You can find Dr. Mohler's other Line by Line sermons here.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.

King James Bible
The Book of Deuteronomy

King James Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 182:27


Deuteronomy (Hebrew דברים devarìm, "words", from the incipit; Greek Δευτερονόμιο, deuteronòmio, "second law", for the compendium, the repetition of laws already present in Exodus and in general of what is written on the Pentateuch, in the first Books of the written Torah; Latin Deuteronomium) is the fifth book of the Hebrew Torah and of the Christian Bible.It is written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most shared by scholars, its final editing, by unknown authors, is placed in the sixth-fifth century BC in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the seventh century BC.It consists of 34 chapters describing the history of the Jews during their sojourn in the Sinai Desert (about 1200 BC) and contains various religious and social laws.(From Italian Wikipedia)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

King James Bible
The Book of Joshua

King James Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 114:24


The Book of Joshua (Hebrew יהושע yehoshuà' ; Greek Ἰησοῦς Iesús; Latin Iosue) is a text contained in the Hebrew (Tanakh) and Christian Bible.It is written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most widely shared by scholars, its final editing, by unknown authors, is placed in the 6th-5th century BC in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the 7th century BC.It consists of 24 chapters describing the story of the conquest of the land of Canaan by the twelve tribes led by Joshua, Moses' successor. The period described is traditionally 1200-1150 BC.(From Italian Wikipedia)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

King James Bible
The Book of Judges

King James Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 112:24


The Book of Judges (Hebrew שופטים shofetìm; Greek Κριτές krités; Latin Iudicum) is a text contained in the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh) and Christian.It is written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most widely shared by scholars, its final editing, by unknown authors, is placed in the 6th-5th century B.C. in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the 7th century B.C. (see Documentary Hypothesis).It consists of 21 chapters describing the history of the twelve tribes in Canaan and the Judges, charismatic occasional military leaders.(From Italian Wikipedia)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

King James Bible
1 Samuel

King James Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 157:21


The books of Samuel (Hebrew שמואל' Σαμουήλ 1-2 samuèl or A'-B' Βασιλέων 1-2 basiléon, "1-2 kings"; Latin 1-2 Samuel) are two texts contained in the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh, where they are counted as a single text) and in the Christian Bible.They are written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most shared by scholars, their final editing by unknown authors, is placed in the sixth-fifth century BC in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the seventh century BC.The first book consists of 31 chapters describing the prophetic ministry of Samuel, the reign of Saul, and the youth of David, set in Judea around 1100-1010 BC. The second book consists of 24 chapters describing the reign of David around 1010-970 BC.The two Books of Samuel constitute, with the following two books of Kings, a continuous work, so much so that the Greek version of the Septuagint and the Latin version of St. Jerome, the so-called Vulgate, have preferred to call them in their entirety the Four Books of Kings (in Greek Basileion).The name "Books of Samuel" derives from a late Talmudic opinion that attributed their compilation to the prophet Samuel.Both the books of Samuel and those of Kings are to be traced back to a single project, that of outlining the historical events of Israel from the end of the era of the Judges until the end of the monarchy with the Babylonian invasion of Nebuchadnezzar II: a period of time that covers over six centuries. The final editing dates back to the sixth century BC.(From Italian Wikipedia).Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

King James Bible
2 Samuel

King James Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 130:25


The books of Samuel (Hebrew שמואל' Σαμουήλ 1-2 samuèl or A'-B' Βασιλέων 1-2 basiléon, "1-2 kings"; Latin 1-2 Samuel) are two texts contained in the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh, where they are counted as a single text) and in the Christian Bible.They are written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most shared by scholars, their final editing by unknown authors, is placed in the sixth-fifth century BC in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the seventh century BC.The first book consists of 31 chapters describing the prophetic ministry of Samuel, the reign of Saul, and the youth of David, set in Judea around 1100-1010 BC. The second book consists of 24 chapters describing the reign of David around 1010-970 BC.The two Books of Samuel constitute, with the following two books of Kings, a continuous work, so much so that the Greek version of the Septuagint and the Latin version of St. Jerome, the so-called Vulgate, have preferred to call them in their entirety the Four Books of Kings (in Greek Basileion).The name "Books of Samuel" derives from a late Talmudic opinion that attributed their compilation to the prophet Samuel.Both the books of Samuel and those of Kings are to be traced back to a single project, that of outlining the historical events of Israel from the end of the era of the Judges until the end of the monarchy with the Babylonian invasion of Nebuchadnezzar II: a period of time that covers over six centuries. The final editing dates back to the sixth century BC.(From Italian Wikipedia).Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

King James Bible
1 Kings

King James Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 137:43


The Books of Kings (Hebrew ספר מלכים sèfer melakhìm (or Mǝlāḵîm), "book of kings"; Greek A'-B' or Γ'-Δ' Βασιλέων 1-2 or 3-4 basiléon, "1-2 or 3-4 of kings"; Latin 1-2 Regum) are two texts contained in the "Tanakh" (where they are counted as a single text) and the Bible.They are written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most shared by scholars, their final editing, by unknown authors, is placed in the sixth-fifth century BC in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the seventh century BC. The first book consists of 22 chapters describing the death of David, Solomon, the split of the Kingdom of Israel from the Kingdom of Judah, the ministry of the prophet Elijah (in the north), and the various kings of Israel and Judah, events dated around 970-850 BC. The second book consists of 25 chapters describing the ministry of the prophets Elisha (in the north) and Isaiah (in the south), various kings of Israel and Judah, the destruction and deportation of the Kingdom of Israel and the Kingdom of Judah, events dated around 850-587 BC.(From Italian Wikipedia).Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

King James Bible
2 Kings

King James Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 137:20


The Books of Kings (Hebrew ספר מלכים sèfer melakhìm (or Mǝlāḵîm), "book of kings"; Greek A'-B' or Γ'-Δ' Βασιλέων 1-2 or 3-4 basiléon, "1-2 or 3-4 of kings"; Latin 1-2 Regum) are two texts contained in the "Tanakh" (where they are counted as a single text) and the Bible.They are written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most shared by scholars, their final editing, by unknown authors, is placed in the sixth-fifth century BC in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the seventh century BC.The first book consists of 22 chapters describing the death of David, Solomon, the split of the Kingdom of Israel from the Kingdom of Judah, the ministry of the prophet Elijah (in the north), and the various kings of Israel and Judah, events dated around 970-850 BC. The second book consists of 25 chapters describing the ministry of the prophets Elisha (in the north) and Isaiah (in the south), various kings of Israel and Judah, the destruction and deportation of the Kingdom of Israel and the Kingdom of Judah, events dated around 850-587 BC.(From Italian Wikipedia).Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

American Standard Bible
The Book of Deuteronomy

American Standard Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 167:08


Deuteronomy (Hebrew דברים devarìm, "words", from the incipit; Greek Δευτερονόμιο, deuteronòmio, "second law", for the compendium, the repetition of laws already present in Exodus and in general of what is written on the Pentateuch, in the first Books of the written Torah; Latin Deuteronomium) is the fifth book of the Hebrew Torah and of the Christian Bible.It is written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most shared by scholars, its final editing, by unknown authors, is placed in the sixth-fifth century BC in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the seventh century BC. (see Documentary Hypothesis).It consists of 34 chapters describing the history of the Jews during their sojourn in the Sinai Desert (about 1200 BCE) and contains various religious and social laws.(From Italian Wikipedia)

American Standard Bible

The books of Samuel (Hebrew שמואל' Σαμουήλ 1-2 samuèl or A'-B' Βασιλέων 1-2 basiléon, "1-2 kings"; Latin 1-2 Samuel) are two texts contained in the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh, where they are counted as a single text) and in the Christian Bible.They are written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most shared by scholars, their final editing by unknown authors, is placed in the sixth-fifth century BC in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the seventh century BC.The first book consists of 31 chapters describing the prophetic ministry of Samuel, the reign of Saul, and the youth of David, set in Judea around 1100-1010 BC. The second book consists of 24 chapters describing the reign of David around 1010-970 BC.The two Books of Samuel constitute, with the following two books of Kings, a continuous work, so much so that the Greek version of the Septuagint and the Latin version of St. Jerome, the so-called Vulgate, have preferred to call them in their entirety the Four Books of Kings (in Greek Basileion).The name "Books of Samuel" derives from a late Talmudic opinion that attributed their compilation to the prophet Samuel.Both the books of Samuel and those of Kings are to be traced back to a single project, that of outlining the historical events of Israel from the end of the era of the Judges until the end of the monarchy with the Babylonian invasion of Nebuchadnezzar II: a period of time that covers over six centuries. The final editing dates back to the sixth century BC.(From Italian Wikipedia).

American Standard Bible

The books of Samuel (Hebrew שמואל' Σαμουήλ 1-2 samuèl or A'-B' Βασιλέων 1-2 basiléon, "1-2 kings"; Latin 1-2 Samuel) are two texts contained in the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh, where they are counted as a single text) and in the Christian Bible.They are written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most shared by scholars, their final editing by unknown authors, is placed in the sixth-fifth century BC in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the seventh century BC.The first book consists of 31 chapters describing the prophetic ministry of Samuel, the reign of Saul, and the youth of David, set in Judea around 1100-1010 BC. The second book consists of 24 chapters describing the reign of David around 1010-970 BC.The two Books of Samuel constitute, with the following two books of Kings, a continuous work, so much so that the Greek version of the Septuagint and the Latin version of St. Jerome, the so-called Vulgate, have preferred to call them in their entirety the Four Books of Kings (in Greek Basileion).The name "Books of Samuel" derives from a late Talmudic opinion that attributed their compilation to the prophet Samuel.Both the books of Samuel and those of Kings are to be traced back to a single project, that of outlining the historical events of Israel from the end of the era of the Judges until the end of the monarchy with the Babylonian invasion of Nebuchadnezzar II: a period of time that covers over six centuries. The final editing dates back to the sixth century BC.(From Italian Wikipedia).

American Standard Bible
The Book of Judges

American Standard Bible

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 111:25


The Book of Judges (Hebrew שופטים shofetìm; Greek Κριτές krités; Latin Iudicum) is a text contained in the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh) and Christian.It is written in Hebrew and, according to the hypothesis most widely shared by scholars, its final editing, by unknown authors, is placed in the 6th-5th century B.C. in Judea, on the basis of previous oral and written traditions, in particular of the so-called Deuteronomist source of the 7th century B.C. (see Documentary Hypothesis).It consists of 21 chapters describing the history of the twelve tribes in Canaan and the Judges, charismatic occasional military leaders.(From Italian Wikipedia)