BibleProject Classroom

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1x1
What on Earth is the Hebrew Bible?
Episode overview
The Hebrew Bible can present particular challenges for different people, such as talking animals, genocide, the portrayal of God, and how to truly apply this ancient text to our modern .. show full overview
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How Jesus and the Apostles Read Their Bibles
Episode overview
Jesus and his first followers portray the Hebrew Bible as a unified collection of wisdom literature that tells a story about a future anointed one who will rescue humanity. The Hebrew .. show full overview
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The Ancient Shape of the Scriptures
Episode overview
Jesus’ Bible was a three-part collection of scrolls called the TaNaK. TaNaK is a designation for the Hebrew Bible taken from the first letter of its three major sections. T stands for .. show full overview
1x4
Seams Between Texts in the Dead Sea Scrolls
Episode overview
The Dead Sea Scrolls preserve the technology of scroll making during the pre-Christian period, revealing what the Hebrew Bible would have looked like in Jesus’ synagogue. Within the .. show full overview
1x5
The Prophet to Come: The Seams of the Torah and Prophets
Episode overview
The final sentences of the Torah and the opening sentences of the Prophets (“Seam One”) anticipate a coming Moses-like prophet who is promised but is yet to come. The final sentences of .. show full overview
1x6
The Prophet to Come: Psalms 1 and 2
Episode overview
Psalm 1 paints a picture of a righteous human who meditates on the Torah day and night, bringing forth life around him. Psalm 2 describes the righteous human of Psalm 1 as the future .. show full overview
1x7
An Important Premise: The Inspiration of Scripture
Episode overview
The Bible’s narratives, poems, histories, letters, prophecies, and other writings come from a profound collaboration between humanity and God. Whenever the biblical authors talk about .. show full overview
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What the Torah Says About the Bible’s Origins
Episode overview
The first three mentions of the writing of the Bible in the Torah give us important clues to the purpose of the Bible. The Bible shows us that it was written (1) to tell the story of how .. show full overview
1x9
What the Prophets Say About the Bible’s Origin
Episode overview
The Hebrew Bible claims to come from a tradition of prophetic leaders in Israel that stems from Moses. The texts reflect a minority report within ancient Israel that comes from those who were faithful to Yahweh and remained true to the covenant.
1x10
The Origin of the Bible From a Historical Perspective
Episode overview
The Bible’s divinity and authority doesn’t negate the human processes that brought it into existence. The Hebrew Bible is a collection of collections made up of preexisting textual .. show full overview
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The Hebrew Bible as a Mosaic
Episode overview
The Hebrew Bible is a collection of scrolls that has been arranged with a mosaic (i.e., composite) unity. The Ketuvim (i.e., the Writings) acts as mini-commentaries on the themes and .. show full overview
1x12
The Hebrew Bible Is Like an Aspen Grove
Episode overview
The Hebrew Bible can be likened to an aspen grove—it’s a collection of texts that are distinctive yet share interconnected origin points and grow together as a united structure telling .. show full overview
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The Different "Encyclopedias" of Authors and Readers
Episode overview
Learning to read the Hebrew Bible well requires an awareness of our personal “encyclopedias of reception” and a discovery of the “encyclopedias of production” assumed by the biblical .. show full overview
1x14
How Biblical Poetry Communicates
Episode overview
Hebrew poetry is shaped into a line-rhythm or verse. It is not metrical (based on syllable counts) but a form of free verse. Hebrew poetry uses intentional, creative language (e.g., .. show full overview
1x15
Common Poetic Conventions in Biblical Hebrew
Episode overview
Poetry is a form of communication that invites the reader into a partnership with the written word inorder to discover its meaning. Learning the function of repetition and of literary .. show full overview
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How Hebrew Parallelism Works
Episode overview
Biblical authors often use parallelism in their poetry, which causes the readers to place two or more things in comparison with each other to show their relation. At its root, .. show full overview
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Macro-Level Repetition in Biblical Poetry
Episode overview
In biblical poetry, the authors invite us to compare parallel words/images in lines that are not next to each other through the use of symmetry (e.g., a symmetrical design such as ABBA). .. show full overview
1x18
Literary Representation and "Reality"
Episode overview
When we read biblical narrative, we are reading an interpretation of the biblical events within the stylized poetics (i.e., conventions) of biblical narrative. Biblical narrative invites .. show full overview
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Plot in Biblical Narrative: The Story of Jonah
Episode overview
The plot of a narrative invests the story with meaning—the conflict within a plot and how the conflict is resolved invests the narrative with its ethical message. Narrative meaning can .. show full overview
1x20
Plots and Subplots
Episode overview
One way biblical narrative uses plot is through plot embedding, or layers of storylines working together to tell the overall story of the Bible. Individual narratives are framed within a .. show full overview
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Characterization and Setting in Biblical Narrative
Episode overview
Biblical authors use characters as vehicles for their message primarily through showing rather than telling. Narrators rarely make comments in biblical narrative, and when they do, it’s .. show full overview
1x22
Design Patterns and Literary Units
Episode overview
The Bible is like a photomosaic with identifiable smaller literary units crafted and arranged to work together and create a larger, overarching message. Biblical authors use repeated .. show full overview
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Identifying Repeated Words
Episode overview
Repeated words, phrases, and parallel themes connect individual stories across the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament. Biblical authors use repetition of lead words to create patterns .. show full overview
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Repeated Words and Literary Design
Episode overview
The message of the text is bound up with its literary form, and the literary form is part of the message. Like biblical poetry, biblical narrative is intentionally designed with an .. show full overview
1x25
Repeated Words Between Juxtaposed Literary Units
Episode overview
The relationships between connected literary units can work in different ways (e.g., contrast, create a sequence), but at the core is an analogy. The reader is being asked to read a .. show full overview
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Repeated Words Between Distant Literary Units
Episode overview
Sometimes the narrative comparison is prompted by an identical repetition in distant narratives. Through the use of key word repetitions, biblical authors lead us to compare and contrast .. show full overview
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Narrative Analogy: Sarai and Genesis 3
Episode overview
The story of Abram and Sarai in Genesis 12:10-20 is set on analogy to Genesis 3 through the use of repeated words. The story is an example of one of the main themes of the Bible—the .. show full overview
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Narrative Analogy: Jacob and Genesis 3
Episode overview
Throughout the entire storyline of the Hebrew Bible, there will be snake-people and humanity-people, and they are going to be at enmity with one another in narrative after narrative. In .. show full overview
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Design Patterns in the New Testament
Episode overview
Design patterns are the main way biblical authors unify hundreds of stories. And every pattern develops a core theme throughout the whole biblical story that leads to Jesus. The stories .. show full overview