Title: The Hebrews
1The Hebrews
Ark of the Covenant
2The Hebrews
- Many people accept the Bible as a collection of
sacred writings. How might it also be an
historical document?
3The Hebrews
- Give examples of documents that historians might
use to piece together the story of a person or
civilization
4The Hebrews
Monotheism
- Unlike other groups living in the Canaan,
believed in one all-powerful God. - Yahweh, Elohim" (God), El Shaddai" (God
Almighty - This teaching exists today as Judaism.
- Judaism has influenced two other monotheistic
religions, Christianity and Islam.
5The Hebrews
The Land of Canaan
- Abraham
- lived in the city of Ur
- around 1900 B.C. he left and settled in the
Canaan. - Hebrews believed that God made a covenant with
Abraham at this time. - I will make of you a great nation was Gods
promise to bless Abraham and his descendants if
they would remain faithful to God.
6The Patriarchs(father ruler) Abraham
- Abraham and his descendants are selected by
Yahweh to be his chosen people over all other
peoples. - Abraham, who is a Semite living in Haran, a city
in northern Mesopotamia, and whose father, Terah,
comes from the city Ur in southern Mesopotamia,
is visited suddenly by Yahweh and told to move
his family.
Abram tried to convince his father, Tera, of the
folly of idol worship. One day, when Abram was
left alone to mind the store, he took a hammer
and smashed all of the idols except the largest
one. He placed the hammer in the hand of the
largest idol. When his father returned and asked
what happened, Abram said, "The idols got into a
fight, and the big one smashed all the other
ones." His father said, "Don't be ridiculous.
These idols have no life or power. They can't do
anything." Abram replied, "Then why do you
worship them?"
7Abrahams journey
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9Isaac
- Isaac was the subject of the most difficult test
of Abraham's faith G-d commanded Abraham to
sacrifice Isaac as a burnt offering. (Gen 22).
This test is known in Jewish tradition as the
Akeidah (the Binding, a reference to the fact
that Isaac was bound on the altar).
10Jacob
- Jacob and Esau
- Rachel and Leah
- Jacob (Israel) wrestled with God
- 12 sons and grandsons become the fathers of the
12 tribes of Israel
11Joseph
- Interpreter of dreams
- Coat of many colors
- Sold into slavery
- Prime Minister of Egypt
12The Hebrews Review
- Abraham
- Isaac
- Jacob
- Joseph
13The Hebrews
The Exodus from Egypt
- Severe drought struck the Canaan and the
Israelites migrated to Egypt perhaps during the
time in which the Hyksos ruled. - They lived peacefully in Egypt until the
pharaohs enslaved them.
14The Hebrews
In Egypt
- At some point during the Hebrew stay in Egypt,
they become enslaved by the Egyptians. - This is most likely during the expulsion of the
Hyksos at the end of the Egyptian Middle Kingdom.
15The Hebrews
The Exodus
- Hebrew people released after a series of ten
plagues, the last of which took the life of
every firstborn son. - Families which prepared for the Passover of the
angel of death were spared.
16The Hebrews
Moses
- The story of Moses is told in the book of Exodus.
- The Exodus
- The Law
17The Hebrews
The Exodus
- During the exodus from Egypt, the Hebrew people
are taught by Moses (upon instruction from God)
how they are to live. - Ten Commandments
- Became major part of Western moral and ethical
traditions.
18The Hebrews
The Torah
- Genesis (the beginning)
- Exodus (the exit)
- Leviticus (instructions for Levites/priests)
- Numbers (first census)
- Deuteronomy (teaching of Moses)
19The Hebrews
The Promised Land
- Moses died before reaching the Canaan, but chose
Joshua to lead the 12 tribes into Promised land. - Joshua leads a fighting force to reclaim land
- After wars, Israelite soldiers become farmers,
herders - Divide land among 12 tribes.
20Twelve Tribes
www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org
21Settling the Promised Land
22The Period of the Judges
23Judges
- No single Israelite leader during 200 years of
war. - Respected male and female judges used as
advisors. - Gideon, Samson, Deborah, Samuel
- First judges were military, later were more legal
advisors - Strong judges kept tribes united
- Weak judges led to some tribes turning to other
gods.
24The Judges
- 1. Othniel (37-11)
- a. brother of Calebb. defeated the Arameans
the spirit of the Lord was on him - 2. Ehud (312-30)
- a. left-handedb. killed Eglon, king of Moab, by
trickery - 3. Shamgar (331, 56)
- a. fought against the Philistines
- 4. Deborah (4-5)
- a. woman tribal leader, both military and
legalb. campaigned against Sisera, Canaanite
general under Jabin, the King of Hazorc. Barak
was military leader under Deborahd. Jael, a
Kenite woman, killed Sisera as he fled
25Judges
- 5. Gideon (6-8)
- a. came from a family of Baal worshippersb.
afraid to trust God, portrayed as an arrogant
cowardc. God gave him a plan to defeat the
Midianitesd. ended up worshipping Baal - 6. Abimelech (9)
- a. not a judge, attempted to make himself king
but failed - 7. Minor Judges Tola and Jair (101-5)
- 8. Jephthah (106-127)
- a. illegitimate child and an outcastb. fought
against the Ammonitesc. made a rash vow that led
to the sacrifice of his only child (see Jepthah's
Rash Vow) -
26Judges
- 9. Minor Judges Ibzan, Elon, Abdon (128-15)
- 10. Samson (13-16)
- a. born to a barren woman by promiseb. was a
Nazarite, but broke his vowsc. was a womanizer
and a drunkd. God helped him bring relief from
the Philistinese. his fatal attraction to
Delilah
27The Hebrews
28The Hebrews
Hebrew Monarchy Samuel, Saul and David
- Samuel, last of the judges, anoints Saul as
first king - Saul, first King of Israel
- Location of palace at Gibeah
- Brings Israel into conflict with sea-peoples
(Philistines) - Killed in battle against Philistines with his son
29The Hebrews
David
- Second King of Israel
- Anointed by Samuel
- Shepherd boy/musician
- David vs. Goliath
- Friendship with Sauls son
- Moves to the capital to Jerusalem (city of David)
- Relationship with Bathsheba
- Makes plans for Temple
- Chooses Solomon successor
30The Hebrews
Solomon
- Renowned for his wisdom
- Thousand wives and concubines and the visit of
the queen of Sheba - Built elaborate temple as permanent home for Ark
of the Covenant
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32The Hebrews
33Israel and Judah
- 922 Solomon dies, son faces rebellion
- Northern tribes demanded less taxes and an end to
forced labour. - Kingdom split into northern Israel, southern
Judah (with Jerusalem)
34Division of Israel and Judah
Five years after the death of Solomon, Jerusalem
was ransacked by the Egyptians, the kingdom split
into two north and south.
35Division of Israel and Judah
- Northern capital moved to Samaria
- northern ten tribes
- King Ahab, with his queen Jezebel, moves to
incorporate foreign gods into Israel - 722 B.C. Israel falls to Assyria Israelites
deported (lost tribes of Israel)
36The Assyrians, who conquer northern Israel,
introduce a new way of dealing with vanquished
nations. Exile.
- The Assyrians bring in a group of people from
someplace else, who -- because they are now
living in Shomron or Samaria -- come to be known
as Samaritans. - The Samaritans are people who more or less adopt
Judaism, but not completely. Because of this,
they are never really accepted by the Jewish
people, and they're very resentful.
37Division of Israel and Judah
- Southern capital remained in Jerusalem
- two southern tribes of Judah and Benjamin
- Judah pays tribute to Assyria upon fall of Israel
38Hezekiah
14th king after King David, and he rules from 590
to 561 BC.
- And he did what was right in the eyes of the
Lord, like all that his father David had done.
And he trusted in the God of Israel. There was
none like him among all the kings of Judah who
were after him, nor were there before him. (2
Kings 183-5)
39Hezekiah
- Rebuilds fortifications of Jerusalem
- Assyrians under Sennacharib, lay seige but do not
conquer. - ... Hezekiah himself I shut up in Jerusalem, his
capital city, like a bird in a cage, building
towers round the city to hem him in... - a plague hits their camp and 185,000 Assyrian
soldiers die overnight. - Sennacherib returns to Ninevah.
40Conquest
- 722 BC Assyria conquers and ends Kingdom of
Israel - Assyrian Empire conquered by Babylonians 612 BC
- Babylonias King Nebuchadnezzar captures
Jerusalem in 586 BC - Destroy the temple
- Take thousands of slaves to Babylon
41The Hebrews
- Jewish survivors and those who have returned to
the homeland, led by various prophets (Haggai,
Zecharia, and Nehemia) struggle to rebuild the
temple and city of Jerusalem. - Jewish leaders speak of a deliverer or messiah
who will lead and restore Israel.
42The Hebrews
Hebrew Timeline
- 2100 - 1900 BC Abraham and descendants live
nomadic life
in Canaan - 1900 - 1500 BC Hebrews live in Egypt
- 1400 BC Hebrews leave Egypt and,
under
Joshua, invade Canaan - 1040 BC First Kings Saul, David
and
Solomon
43The Hebrews
Hebrew History Timeline Cont.
- 930 BC Kingdom divides into North
(Israel) and
South (Judah) - 722 BC Israel conquered by Assyria,
people taken
into captivity - 586 BC Babylonian army destroys
Jerusalem - 539 BC Babylonian empire falls
to
Persians and Cyrus allows Jews
to return home -
44586 B.C. Jerusalem falls to Nebuchadnezzar of
Babylon
- people of Judah (Jews), deported to Babylon
- Babylonians set up puppet king, Zedekiah, to
rule. - Jews revolt and the Temple is destroyed by the
Babylonians.
45Babylonian Exile
By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, we
also wept, when we remembered Zion. We hung our
lyres on the willows in its midst. For there
those who carried us away captive required of us
a song and those who tormented us required of us
mirth, saying, Sing us one of the songs of
Zion. How shall we sing the Lord's song in a
foreign land? If I forget you, O Jerusalem, let
my right hand forget her cunning. If I do not
remember you, let my tongue cleave to the roof of
my mouth if I do not set Jerusalem above my
highest joy. (Psalms 1371-6)
46Babylon
Nebuchadnezzar to Belshazar
- Daniel in the lions den.
- Daniel survives, prompting Nebuchadnezzar to
issue a decree forbidding anyone to blaspheme the
God of Israel. - Writing on the wall.
- The last king of Babylon, Belshazzar thinks he
has outdone the God of Israel when the seventy
years are over.
47- "And this whole land of Israel shall be a ruin,
and a waste, and these nations the tribes of
Israel shall serve the king of Babylon seventy
years. And it shall come to pass, when the
seventy years are fulfilled, that I will punish
the king of Babylon ..." (Jeremiah 2511-12)
48Daniel has no trouble reading the writing on the
wall. It says
They counted the years wrong.
- "God has numbered the days of your kingdom and
brought it to an end ... your kingdom has been
divided and given to the Medes and Persians."
(Daniel 525-28) - That very night invading hoards of Persians and
Medes attack. The king and all his party are
killed. Only Nebuchadnezzar's grand-daughter,
Vashti, survives.
49The armies of Medes under Darius and the armies
of Persia under Cyrus march into Babylon and
conquer it. The Babylonian Empire ceases to exist
and it is now absorbed by the new Persian Empire.
- In 370 BC Cyrus issues a decree allowing all the
indigenous peoples that had been exiled by the
now-defunct Babylonian empire to go back to their
homeland - Of the million Jews living in Persia, only a
handful (42,000) return
50Queen Vashti
Granddaughter of Nebuchadnezzar, wife of
Achashverosh (Xerxes I)
- After some drunken revelry featuring (yet again)
the Temple vessels, the king orders his wife to
appear wearing nothing besides the royal crown.
She refuses to come and he has her executed. - Queenless, scouts are sent throughout the land to
find the most beautiful woman.
51Queen Esther
Haman is the advisor to the King.
- Haman gets the king to agree to issue a secret
decree to annihilate the Jews of Persia on the
13th day of the Hebrew month of Adar. - He chooses this day by throwing lots (purim).
- Things get turned around for Haman, and he ends
up hanging on the gallows he had prepared for the
Jews.
52Darius II
Allows Jews to rebuild the temple.
- Ezra emerges as a Jewish leader to keep the
people on task and pure. (No intermarriage.) - 2nd Temple Period
- Increase in amount of Priests
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55To the Greeks, what was beautiful was holy to
the Jews, what was holy was beautiful. These
views were bound to clash.
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