History and Literature of the Bible
Discussion Outlines and Book Summaries
 
 

This page contains outlines for all of the class discussions, the text of any assigned readings by Palmer, and additional online resources related to the topic of most class discussions. Clicking on any blue or red text will take you to the resource it names.

Unit One
The Historical, Geographical,and 
Cultural Settings of the Bible

A Quick Overview of the Contents of the Bible

Outline Assigned Reading

Related Internet Resources

Book Summaries (A brief summary of each book of the Bible)

Differences between Christian and Jewish Canons of Scripture

How Should We Read the Bible?
Outline Assigned Reading Related Internet Resources
Literary History of the Bible (Canonization, Transmission, and Translations)
Outline Assigned Reading Related Internet Resources
From Hebrew Bible to Christian Bible: Jews, Christians, and the Word of God (A part of the Frontline [PBS] documentary "From Jesus to Christ") 
Israel and the Geography and History of the Ancient Near East
Outline Assigned Reading Related Internet Resources
A map of the Ancient Middle East from Egypt to the Persian Gulf 
A map of the twelve tribes of Israel
Another map of the twelve tribes of Israel
Ever wanted to be an archaeologist? Go on a virtual dig at the Israel Museum.
Unit Two The Torah
Authorship and Composition of the Torah
Outline Assigned Reading Related Internet Resources
History of the Documentary Hypothesis (by students and faculty at the Santa Clara University Religious Studies Department)
Genesis
Genesis is a book of beginnings. It relates stories about creation, the beginnings of God's interaction and humanity, and the beginnings of God's relationship with Abraham and his descendants through a special promise.
Outline The assignment for this topic is pages 108-132 of the book by Harris.
Related Internet Resources
A picture of the way many ancient people's imagined the world to be structured (an ancient cosmology) 
Famous paintings related to the Garden of Eden story 
Pictures related to the Tower of Babel story 
Photograph of the remains of an ancient Ziggurat at Ur
A photograph of the Flood Tablet from the Gilgamesh Epic
Exodus-Deuteronomy: God's Covenant with Israel
The title "Exodus" means "departure." The first 19 chapters of the book of Exodus tell a story in which God leads the Hebrew people out of slavery in Egypt. The rest of the book tells of God making a covenant with those same people and giving them laws to guide their lives. 

Taking its name from the priestly tribe of Levi, the book of Leviticus is a collection of laws concerned mainly with rituals. 

The title of the book of Numbers comes from two censuses taken during a period of forty years of wandering in the wilderness before the Hebrew people entered Canaan. This title, though, does not give an immediate grasp of the contents of the book. The book tells of the wanderings of the Hebrew people who left slavery in Egypt (chapters 1- 25) and of the next generation after all of them except for Moses and two faithful spies (Caleb and Joshua) had died (chapters 26-36). 

The book of Deuteronomy tells of Moses giving three farewell speeches before he died. In these speeches he reviews the laws that God had given in the wilderness, applying them more closely to the new setting of life in Canaan which was about to come. These speeches can be viewed as a second Law, a deutero-nomy.

Outline Assigned Reading Related Internet Resources Satelite picture of the Sinai Peninsula
The traditional route of the Exodus
A Comparison of the Decalogue in Exodus and Deuteronomy
Unit Three The Former Prophets/
The Deuteronomistic History
Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings
 
The book of Joshua tells a story in which Joshua, the successor to Moses, leads the armies of Israel in their conquest of the land of Canaan--the land promised to Abraham and his descendants. After the conquest Joshua divides the land among the tribes of Israel. 

Judges tells of a repeating cycle of religious unfaithfulness, divine punishment, and a transitory return to faithfulness in the early years of the people's life in the promised land. They abandon their God to worship the gods of the Canaanites, and God allows them to be oppressed by their Canaanite neighbors. Then God sends a "judge" to lead them and deliver them from their enemies. After returning to the worship of their own God, they soon become unfaithful again and the cycle begins again. 

Samuel was the prophet, priest, and judge who led the Hebrew people in the time of transition from a loose confederation of tribes to monarchy. First Samuel begins with his story and tells of the choice of Saul as the first King of Israel. Saul's rule is troubled, though, and Samuel anoints David to succeed him. 

Second Samuel tells of David's rule beginning with a period of strong, unified government, but then David commits adultery and murder--clear violations of the covenant. Both David's family and the nation suffer as a result of this violation. 

First Kings begins with stories about Solomon's reign over Israel. When Solomon died the nation split. The northern tribes kept the name "Israel" while the south, where Jerusalem was located, came to be known as "Judah." First Kings tells the story of the early years of both kingdoms. 

The story begun in First Kings continues in Second Kings, which tells the story of the fall of the northern nation, Israel, to the Assyrian Empire in 721 BCE, then continues by telling the story of Judah until Jerusalem was destroyed by the Babylonians in 587 BCE.  These events are presented as God's judgment upon the people because of their lack of faithfulness to the covenant.

Outline Assigned Reading Related Internet Resources
Maps related to Joshua and Judges 
Crossing the Jordan River
Joshua's War of Conquest
A map of the territory of the twelve tribes of Israel as presented in the book of Joshua
The Judges of Israel in their Locations
Maps related to the books of Samuel and Kings 
Map showing arrival of the Sea Peoples (including the Philistines)
The Career of Samuel
The Career of Saul
The Career of David
The Assyrian Empire
The Babylonian Empire
A full list of the kings of Israel and Judah and the periods in which they lived
Unit Four The Latter Prophets
The Latter Prophets in Canonical Order (For a discussion of the Latter Prophets in chronological order, click here .) 
 
The prophet Isaiah warned of God's judgment on the nations. The book which bears his name also promises that God will send a future king like David, and speaks of a coming time of comfort and peace. 

As Babylonian presure on Judah inclreased in the 500s BCE, Jeremiah spoke of God's coming judgment. Warning the king not to resist the Babylonians, Jeremiah's message focusses on the destruction to come. Still, he also expresses hope for a new covenant with God which will not be broken. 

Also dating from in the 500s BCE, Ezekiel's message was delivered to the Judean people exiled to Babylon. The stories, parables, and prophetic actions the book relates address the topics of judgment, hope and restoration. 

Living Israel (the Northern Nation) in the 700s BCE, Hosea married a prostitute and used her unfaithfulness to illustrate Israel's "adultery" against God. Hosea's own faithfulness toward his wife is used to illustrate God's faithful love toward Israel. 

Joel interpreted a locust plague in Judah as God's judgment against the nation and urged the people to repent. 

Amos was a Judean prophet who went north to Israel and preached judgment against the rich people there during a time of prosperity in the late 700s BCE. He called on them to practice economic justice toward the poor and oppressed. 

Obadiah pronounced judgment on Edom for its role in aiding the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem in the 500s BCE. 

The book of Jonah presents the story of a prophet who did not want to preach to the people of Ninevah, one of the capitals of the Assyrian Empire. When he finally relented and delivered God's message of judgment, the people repented and Jonah became angry because God decided not to punish them. 

Micah delivered words of both judgment and mercy to Judah in the 700s BCE. His brief summary of what God requires (6.8) is one of the most quoted texts in the Hebrew Bible. 

Shortly before Ninevah, capital of the Assyrian Empire fell (612 BCE), Nahum rejoiced that God was bringing down the once powerful people because of their cruelty in war. 

Written shortly before the Babylonians conquered Judah, the book of Habakkuk questions God's fairness, but then asserts that the righteous person must have faith in God's justice. 

After beginning by announcing the Lord's judgment on Judah and its neighbors, Zephaniah changes tone in chapter three to announce that the judgment has been removed. This change may reflect the religious shift that came in Judah with Josiah's reform. 

After the Judean people returned from exile in Babylon, Haggai urged them to rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem. 

Like Haggai, Zechariah urged the people to rebuild the Temple. The book also contains later prophecies from the time after the rebuilding was complete. 

Malachi criticized the religous apathy of people living in Judah after the return from exile in Babylon.

Outline An assignement from the materials by Palmer may appear here later in the semester. Check the course schedule on 10/3/03 (looking at the entry for 10/6/03) to see if there has been a change.

For now, the assignment is pages 215-254 of the book by Harris and the Chronology of the Latter Prophets is available here.
Related Internet Resources
Map showing the Nations against which Amos' delivered Oracles (8th Century BCE) 
Map of the Assyrian Empire showing the Prophets who addressed the Assyrian Threat (8th-7th Centuries BCE) 
Map of the Babylonian Invasion of Judah (588-587 BCE) 
Map of the Babylonian Empire showing the Prophets who addressed the Babylonian Threat (6th Century BCE) 
The Persian Empire and the Post-exilic Prophets (Late 6th to 4th Centuries BCE) 
Interactive map showing the Assyrian, Babylonian, Perian, and Greek Empires
Timeline of the Latter Prophets


 
Unit Five The Writings
Outline Assigned Reading Related Internet Resources
The Deuteronomic History and the Chronicler's History
A Synagogue from the Persian Period unearthed near Modi'in
The Edict of Cyrus in Stone
Restoration after the Babylonian Exile
Eric Meyers on the Persian Period and the Judean Restoration


 
Unit Six The Apocrypha/Deuterocanon
and the Hellenistic Age
Israel in the Hellenistic Age
Outline Full Text Related Internet Resources
The Wailing Wall at this very moment (The time in the lower right corner of the image is the current time in Jerusalem. To update the picture, click the "Reload" or "Refresh" button in your browser.)
Interactive map showing the conquests of Alexander the Great 
Map of the Hellenistic Kingdoms
Interactive map showing the growth of the Roman Empire
First-Century Judaism(s)
Outline The reading assignment on First-century Judaisms is pages 368-383 of the book by Harris. Related Internet Resources
Scale Model of the Temple in Jerusalem 
The Dead Sea Scrolls
Listen to the Frontline Presentation on the Dead Sea Scrolls (Requires RealAudio) 
Map showing the Jewish diaspora in the first century CE
Online quiz on First-century Judaism(s)

 
Unit Seven Jesus and the Gospels
The Gospels: Four Portraits of Jesus as the Christ
Matthew's Gospel argues that Jesus is the Messiah promised in the Hebrew Scriptures. He is presented as a great teacher of Torah who came to fulfill the Law and the Prophets. Matthew tells Jesus' story from his birth to the resurrection, including more of his teachings than any other gospel. 

Mark's Gospel is the shortest of the four canonical gospels. The story begins with the preaching of John the Baptist in the wilderness and emphasizes Jesus' miracles and his suffering. Presenting Jesus' work as decisive and urgent Mark wrote to strengthen the faith of a persecuted community of believers. 

Luke's Gospel, the longest of the four, emphasizes Jesus' involvement with the poor, the unclean, women, and others excluded from power in the ancient world. Jesus makes salvation (healing) available for all people. He is presented as a Savior, a healer of both the body and the spirit. The Holy Spirit plays a strong role in Luke's Gospel as the force driving Jesus' ministry. Prayer is also emphasized as the means of communication between God and the faithful. Luke states that he has written "so that you may know the truth" concerning Jesus' story.

The Gospel of John has very little overlap with the others. The first half of John's story of Jesus is organized around seven signs (miracles) that point to Jesus as the Son of God, and the last half has a strong focus on the crucifixion as Jesus' moment of glory. The reflective style of this gospel is quite different from the other three. The author states that he has written to encourage faith in Jesus as the Messiah, the Son of God.

Outline The assigned reading for the Gospels is pages 387-485 of the book by Harris.
Related Internet Resources
Geographic Organization of Mark's Gospel
Comparison of the Structure of the Gospels of Matthew and Mark
Comparison of the Structure of Matthew, Mark, and Luke
Diagram showing the overlap between Matthew, Mark, and Luke
Diagram of the Two Document Hypothesis/Four Source Theory
Other internet resources on the Gospels 
Internet resources on the Synoptic Problem
Jesus of Nazareth
Outline The assigned reading on the "Historical Jesus" is pages 476-510 of the book by Harris. Related Internet Resources
From Jesus to Christ (A Frontline presentation from PBS) 
ABC News coverage of the Search for Jesus
Mark Goodacre's Historical Jesus pages 
Beyond Belief : Scholars talk about the Resurrection (on the BBC)  Listen to the BBC program (Requires RealAudio)
The Oldest Evidence of Jesus ? (A CNN.com report)
More articles on the James Ossuary (from the SBL site)
Where did Jesus fit in the society of his time? Listen to the PBS discussion in From Jesus to Christ: Jesus' Many Faces
Get the text of "From Jesus to Christ: Jesus' Many Faces"

 
 
Unit Eight The Early Church
Paul: Apostle to the Gentiles
Outline There are two sets of assigned reading on Paul. Click here to read the online assignment, then read pages 538-564 of the book by Harris.
Related Internet Resources
Mark Goodacre's Paul Page

 Pauline and Deutero-pauline Views on Women's Roles
Outline The assigned reading on the Disputed Pauline Letters is pages 564-574 of the book by Harris . Class discussion, however, will focus on the views of women in these letters. Read well and take good notes in class! Related Internet Resources
Frontline discussion on the roles of women in early Christianity
Frontline: Women in Ancient Christianity: the New Discoveries
Pamela Eisenbaum on Paul, Mysogyny, and Antisemitism
Internet resources on Women and Gender in Early Christianity

The General Letters and Revelation
Outline  The assgined reading on the general letters is pages 575-587 of Harris' book. This material will not be discussed in class. The assigned reading on the book of Revelation is pages 592-604. Related Internet Resources
Other internet resources on Hebrews, James, First and Second Peter, and Jude 
Other internet resources on the Revelation to John 
Apocalypse : The PBS Frontline Presentation 
The Seven Cities of the Book of Revelation 



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