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Writing the Bible: Origins of the Old Testament

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Writing the Bible: Origins of the Old Testament

Auteur(s): Martien Halvorson-Taylor, The Great Courses
Narrateur(s): Martien Halvorson-Taylor
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À propos de cet audio

Who wrote Great Expectations? That’s easy: Charles Dickens. Who’s the author of Beloved? Toni Morrison, of course. Now how about the Old Testament?

You’d think for a book as widely known, studied, and distributed as the Bible, the question of authorship would have been sorted out by now. But the question is more complex (and fascinating) than it seems. Why? Because asking it is to challenge everything we might assume about the Bible’s identity as a book, about what “writing” and “authorship” really mean, and about how a written text could become sacred to Jews and Christians, both in the ancient world and today.

In Writing the Bible: Origins of the Old Testament, work through these fascinating questions (and their related assumptions) in the company of biblical expert Martien A. Halvorson-Taylor of the University of Virginia. As you chase down answers, you’ll travel back in time to explore how oral traditions — ancient songs and stories — shaped the identity of an emerging nation, Israel, and how those traditions came to be written down, reinterpreted, and gathered into a collection of books that resonate with us even now.

The Old Testament reflects the profundity and timelessness of human experience. It has the power to shape our sense of our own lives, to frame our fears, and to inspire our ultimate hopes. What could be more interesting than finding out who, exactly, we should thank for that?

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A lot of gems in her thinking. I rewound parts though I heard her the first time, I just wanted them to sink in. An awesome author.

Delightfully interesting

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I knew before hearing this that the bible was written by many people over vast time, this series of lectures (spoken in a slow monotone from a female voice) makes it easy to understand the different sources for different parts of the bible and how they were woven together from different tribes and how we can tell things about different texts authenticity or point of view and relation to other texts by what it says, how it says it and any other information about where the text was found how it was dated ect.

Answers the question as best as it can be answered

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This wowed me. it made me think and notice things I took as unquestionable truths about the Bible. thank you prof Martien.

Eye opening

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Reading now the book, "Holy misogyny: why the sex and gender conflicts in the early church still matter" and reading this audiobook first gives greater context to reading Holy Misogyny, especially the events surrounding King Josiah in 600 BCE

Interesting!

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Now consider it irresponsible to have ever spoken about the Bible without the basic knowledge presented here. There is no theological agenda, and nothing but complete respect and even a sense of wonder from the speaker. A must-listen for anyone with more than a passing interest in scriptures.

Feeling challenged but grateful

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Although it does present certain facts about the Bible, and the process which occurred over centuries, it also takes huge leaps of faith in asserting many things which she, nor any other biblical scholar, actually has any proof of. To say explicitly that these scribes never thought of what they were doing as 'being divinely inspired' is a complete assumption and a break from any traditional understanding of the people who compiled the Bible, which is fine if there evidence for the claim, but this secular ideal is just as much as a 'passed down tradition' within secular biblical studies as the traditions which she claims are false all throughout the course. And there a numerous topics in which she does this with. Very dangerous listen for anyone who is without a proper understanding of the actual Bible text and is not able to sift through the factual statements she makes that have evidence, with the outlandish and outright presumptionious statements she presents as being factual.

Very Historically ReVisionist

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