The Hebrew Scriptures, known to non-Jews as "the Old
Testament," is literally a library of ancient texts and sources. The first
part to crystallize was the Five Books of Moses. Soon thereafter the books
of the Prophets were joined to them. Slower to develop was the concept
that certain books of wisdom—what we now call the Writings—should also be
considered sacred.
Examining these books, one by one, we discover why
each became indispensable for teachers of Jewish, and also Christian,
belief. From later histories like Chronicles and Ezra and Nehemiah, to
Psalms and Proverbs, to the novels of Ruth and Esther, to the blood-soaked
Book of Lamentations and the social criticism of Ecclesiastes, from the
erotic poetry of Song of Songs to the monumental theology of the Book of
Job and the messianic aspirations of the Book of Daniel, we delineate the
development of the Writings through the eyes of those who included them in
the corpus of Scriptures.
Surely, it is not by accident that these rich
treasures of literature and belief are known to us, even to this day, as
the wisdom literature of the Bible.
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Discover
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The making of the Biblical Canon and
why it led to the inclusion of the Writings
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The development of writing itself in the
ancient Near East
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The evolution of makeup and the kinds
of cosmetics used in ancient times
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The mysteries of the Book of Daniel
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How the Book of Jonah has been interpreted
through the ages
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The real arguments put forward in the Book
of Job
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The evolution of the the Book of Proverbs
from Mesopotamian and Egyptian sources
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How the Writings have been portrayed by
artists through the ages & how they are being portrayed today
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The Bible's most blatant book of erotica,
Song of Songs, and the tradition of erotic writing and sculpture in
the ancient Near East
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