OT 101 - Lecturer's Notes 2023
OT 101 - Lecturer's Notes 2023
OT 101 - Lecturer's Notes 2023
INTRODUCTION
The TaNaK is a word derived from the division of the Hebrew Bible. T stands for the Torah which
is also called the Pentateuch. Some believed that the Torah is the section which is referred to as
the five books of Moses. These books give all the narrative of the people of Israel, the period of
the flood and the Patriarchs, to the Exodus from Egypt, wandering in the wilderness and giving
the law at Mt. Sinai .Letter N stands for Nebiim, which refers to the Prophets. The later Prophets
and the former Prophets. The last letter, K, stands for Ketubiim which means the writings. The
writings show the books of David in Psalms, Moses to name a few. Canonization means how these
books were written and the criteria used to collect the books.
The TaNaK is an acronym derived from the name of the three divisions of the Hebrew Bible. The
Torah which means instructions or law. The Torah is a composition of five books namely, Genesis,
Leviticus, Numbers and the Deuteronomy. These books are also referred to as the books of Moses.
These books give a narrative of the people of Israel from the creation of the world, through the
period of the flood and the Patriarchs, The Patriarchs refer to the stories of Abram who later was
named Abraham, his covenant and his promise to have a child .Isaac his journey and Jacob who
finally named Israel and to the Exodus, from Egypt, the wanderings in the wilderness and the
giving law at Mt Sinai. The Torah which is also called the Pentateuch includes Moses' farewell to
the people of Israel. The second division of the Hebrew Bible is represented by the letter N which
is the Nebiim. This is composed of eight books subdivided into the former Prophets containing the
four Historical works these include Joshua, Judges, first and second Samuel, first and second Kings
and the later Prophets the Oracles Discourse of Isiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel. The Minor Prophets;
Hosea, Joel, Obadiah, Jonah, Haggai, Zachariah and Malachi. The twelve were the later written
the single scroll and thus reckoned as the book. The Ketuvim consists of the religious Poetry,
Proverbs and Job. this collection is known as the five Megillot include which include Songs of
Solomon, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastics and Easter-which may be grouped together according
to the annual cycle of their public reading in the Synagogue and the book of Daniel, Ezra, Nahum
and Nehemiah and Chronicles.
INSPIRATION OF SCRIPTURE
There are three common theories of inspiration of scripture that are put forward.
CANONIZATION OF SCRIPTURE
- A canon is a stalk, a reed, measuring rod/rule. Heb qaneh and Greek kanon, means
rule, principle, a canon means a rule of faith. Thus, in literature a canon i a set of
writings that are regarded as a standard and authoritative. Therefore, the Hebrew Bible
is a Canon. We also have the Protestant Canon, Samaritan canon, the Roman Catholic
Canon.
- Canonization is the process by which some books are considered or accepted as
authoritative and some being rejected. In canonisation there are two concepts
important (a) canonize (b) close a canon. This means if books are canonised it does not
mean there no more writing, eg Gen 14 ‘ Abram chased his enemies as far as Dan’, but
Dan comes into picture around 900BCE , meaning someone write well after Dan had
come into existence. So we begin with a canon that is open which allows editing. So
the Hebrews, by fearing that their Canon could be edited/revised, added or subtracted
by their radical sects among themselves, they had to close the canon. Canonization
implies that there are too many writings that are in circulation, thus there is need
canonise and close the canon. Writings naturally do not share the same perspectives,
thus too many writings means too many perspectives. Thus canonisation tries to limit
what is available to people and also gives them the fear of thinking what would happen
to them if found reading the rejected/ unacceptable material (just think of one caught
reading the Daily News in 2000 in Zimbabwe!!). Therefore unless there is limitations
to possibilities of reading materials at the people’s disposal, there will be danger of
discord in the community/ within a denomination/ nation politically, etc. Hence
canonization is way to control, sustain community values.
IMPORTANCE OF CANONISATION
- Those who wrote the bible had their own interests eg. News papers
- People will not know the right thing to believe when there is democracy in publication
- Jewish leaders used money to perpetuate lies
- Canonization is there to assimilate what people accepts or takes in
- It removes confusion
1. Ruth was a Moabite but it was accepted due to its link to David
2. Daniel was written outside the prophetic inspiration period but it was accepted because
some of its parts were written in Hebrew and it was regarded as a writing not a prophet
- However modern scholarship regards Daniel Apocalyptic literature together with
Revelations
3. Songs of Solomon
- It had a problem because it was erotic and circular but it was accepted because it was
written by a prominent Jew, Solomon.
4. Ecclesiastes – because it says the is no meaning to life , it is pessimistic or negative and
it questions the activities or actions of God
- However it was accepted because it was written by a prominent Jew, Solomon.
- Babylonians
- Syrians
- Arabs
- Arameans
- Canaanites
- Jebusites
- Moabites – descendants of Lot with his Daughter
- Edomites – descendants of Esau
- Ammonites – descendants of Lot with his daughter
- Hebrews/Jewish/Israelites- descendants of Abraham with Sarah
- Ruled by Pharaohs
- Civilization began in Egypt
- The river Nile was their source of life – farming
- Israelites’ oppression was in Egypt
- Egypt’s history is the story of the Nile and the desert
- In Egypt , rainfall was almost unknown and all life
revolved around the waters of the river Nile
- The river provided drink and irrigation , highway of
communication for its towns and cheap means of
transportations of goods and trade
- The desert was also important because it sealed
Egypt off from all the nations around her
- It created a great sense of self importance
- Egypt was also known as two lands, upper and lower
Egypt
- By the time of the bible Egyptians were Semitic in
outlook but Africans in race
- According to John Currid, ancient Egyptians were
black
- Egypt was under the leadership of pharaoh
- Pharaoh was a Dynasty name or a system
- Egypt had several gods and Pharaoh was regarded as
a god
- These gods were dealt with in the exodus contention
THE VIZIER
- The vizier was the most powerful man in Egypt and
was chosen from the ranks of Nobility or priesthood
- All agricultural matters were under the authority of a
vizier
- He checked the census report of cattle
- He inspected greenery
- He superintendent forestry
- All achieve documents were to be accessed at his
consent
- He selected staff for the palace
- He was responsible for taxation
- He recruited the board guard and took charge for all
arrangements of the King’s progress
- He was also Chief justice
In 722 BC, Assyria conquered Israel or Samaria and took them into captivity, 2Kings 17:1-7,24
into the far east. The Israelites were deported from their land
PERSIA
Northen kingdom= Israel Yahwism- the worshiping of Yhw in Israel, The God of Israel is
unique. He is not like any other god who came in form and image. The Israelites felt his
presence but never saw Him
Baal – produce of land . when Elijah stopped rain for 3 years he just wanted to show them
that Baaal was not God of fertility. Yahweh is the supreme God
In Baalism, fornication Elisha was left with the task to rectify the issues of Israel,
Religious, Economic, Social, Political
This is the area that has Egypt in the south It is also referred to as the Holy Land. In some texts,
the Holy Land is referred to as:
Geography of the biblical land helps us to understand how these people lived, moved and did in
relation to climate and geography of that land. This land is divided into eight major parts:
1. Coastal Plain
2. Jezreel Valley (Naboth’s vineyard). Occupies the flat land
3. Philistine cities (Way of the sea or Philistines used by traders)
4. Low lying hills – Shephelah – It was known for production of grapes and olive trees
5. Central Highlands – This is the land between the coastal plain and the Jordan river
dominated by mountains running from north to south broken by the Jezreel valley. It also
runs parallel to the sea. There were the Judean desserts in the south with caves that rebels
and bandits would hide. Mount Zion was located here.
6. Jordan rift – Very important geographical feature because it is the lowest point on earth
and that point is in the Dead sea. We find the Jordan valley and had cities like Jericho. This
also had the Jordan forest. When David referred to Saul and said when I was tending the
sheep, I killed a lion and bear, they came from the forest. When Elisha commended the
hyenas to eat those children who mocked him, they came from the forest.
7. Beyond the Jordan- Also called the trans-Jordan area (The land east to Jordan). Known for
much water and because of that people do cattle ranching due to fertile pastures. That is
why Amos refers to women of Israel as cattle of Bashal and David refers to the Bulls of
Bashal.
Key crops of the land were wheat, barley, olives and grapes.
These methods are also called Historical Critical Methods and these include source, form,
redaction, textual, tradition, archaeological, rhetoric criticism. However, with modern scholarship,
it has what is called Literary Critical Methods including post-colonial, sociological, feminist,
reader response criticism.
A French doctor Jean Astruc was reading the bible in 1753AD and noted some discrepancies in
Genesis chapter 1 and 2 in particular the creation. He noted that the author used two sources in
interpreting God. Chapter 1 used Elohim and Chapter 2 used Yahweh.
Another scholar named A. Geddes says it made of various segments. This scholar and others noted
that Jean did not neglect the authorship of Genesis but rather using two sources. Mosaic authorship
was first rejected due to the narrative of his death.
Source criticism is a method which seeks to identify and isolate written sources used in writing of
the biblical books. Moses used written sources to write the Pentateuch. The method assumes that
the writers were using cut and paste. Each source has clearly identifiable characteristics which can
be theological or has a distinct vocabulary or literary style. These characteristics can be used to
identify and isolate the sources that are used in a particular text; thus, interpretation becomes better
with identified sources.
A man by the name Julius Wellhausem developed the 4-documentary hypothesis. This hypothesis
claims that there are four sources that were used in writing the Pentateuch namely (J.E.D.P)
Yahweist 9th BCE 899-800 – Yahweh – Solomon era
Elohist 8th BCE 799-700 - Elohim
Deutronomist 7th BCE 699-600 – Only found in the book of Deutronomy
Priestly 6th BCE – 599-500 - Both Yahweh and Elohim
In Gen 1 the question is how did our world come into being? And we cannot talk of the universe
without talking of the humans. It also has cosmological interests that our environment.
In Gen 2 it makes man the center of the narrative. It is anthropocentric. It then narrows down to
the masculine when man (male) was created. Man has the right to name everything, which shows
authority in the man. Man must dominate the environment. Since man dominates the environment
and any creation thereafter i.e. woman.
If God has created everything for man to enjoy, why do we suffer?
1. It assumes that all communities are writing communities e.g. the sources used to compile
the OT were written sources
2. If fails to acknowledge that compilers had their own influences on certain texts.
The Patriarchs
The patriarchs of ancient Israel are the founding fathers of the Israel community. The founding
fathers are;
1. Abraham
2. Isaac
3. Jacob
4. Joseph (preserved the posterity of Israel due to his influence in Egypt)
Genesis 12 – 50 is regarded as the patriarchal tradition/history/narrative. It talks about how the
nation of Israel begun and it is a narrative of one family that produces the whole nation. Jacob had
thirteen children. Jacobs family entered as twelve sons and came out as twelve tribes. Two tribes
were replaced Levi and Joseph with Manasseh and Ephraim.
Joseph’s Policy
He introduced civil service where land owners became slaves. It was Joseph’s noble idea to save
the nation and the world by that time. After a while there came a Pharaoh who did not recognize
Joseph and the Israelites were turned into slaves
There were found clay tablets called Mari tablets and were written common names i.e. Abaram-
ram, Jacob-el.
The phrase children of the right hand were a common name in the ancient time which referred to
the tribe of Benjamin. There were migrations that happened between 2200 and 1800 BCE caused
by famine, weather conditions etc. The Nile by then made Egypt to have food and this migration
was from the East to West which is Egypt.
Use of fire as a signal to inform others of an impending threat or danger.
A Mesopotamian king by the name Hammurabi brought about the Hammurabi code with more
than six hundred laws an adaptation by Israelite laws which had 613 laws. Also, at Nuzi (near
Mari) there were customs and practices that were done and where identified with those amongst
the Israelites like (1.) Childlessness as in Genesis 38. (2) Abraham to be a father of many yet he
has no son. He adopted a slave Eliezer to be a son. 3) Approval of taking a maid to have child i.e.
Surrogacy. However, Sarah became jealousy of the maid and the son bore to Abraham and
instigated the chasing away of Hagar. There were laws that protected children produced outside
e.g. Ishmael.
At Nuzi the birthright could be sold or exchanged but the deathbed blessing stayed unchanged
once said by the father. That which Isaac gave to Esau was called secondary blessing.
Since Israel considered itself a religious community, the question who was their God is key. From
a critical analysis of the text i.e. Hebrew Bible, they never had a static religious system. Genesis
12:7-8, Joshua 24:14
The phrase God of our fathers is very ambiguous. Everyone has a right to worship this God. Before
monotheism (worshipping one and only one God) there were other gods preferred.
There are three pillars of worship used by the patriarchs.
1. Altars,
2. Sacred Bushes, and
3. Sacrifice i.e. the burnt offering.
The patriarchs did not say there is only one and only God, but only God being Yahweh being more
powerful than other gods i.e. monolatry (Exodus 18:11). Other scholars have argued that Israel’s
history is henotheism, which is belief in family territorial or tribal gods
Here, a student is expected to narrate this history paying attention to key people, events and
places as well as dates.