BibleProject - How Was the Hebrew Bible Written?
Episode Date: May 19, 2025How the Bible Was Formed E2 — The Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament, is a collection of 24 scrolls, passed down for generations, that tells the long, complicated story of ancient Israel. But who wro...te these scrolls, and how did they come together in their final form? And how do we understand the claim that these books are the very voice of God? In this episode, Jon and Tim explore the formation of the Hebrew Bible and the crew who shaped its stories, poems, and laws into intricately designed literary works.CHAPTERSThe First Writing Mentioned in the Torah (2:56-13:01)Prophets as a Spirit-Led, Multigenerational Literary Community (13:01-36:30)Divine Inspiration in a Diverse, Literary Mosaic (36:30-1:03:20)OFFICIAL EPISODE TRANSCRIPTView this episode’s official transcript.REFERENCED RESOURCESThe Lost World Series by John H. Walton and othersThe Lost World of Scripture: Ancient Literary Culture and Biblical Authority by John H. Walton and Brent SandyThe Shape of the Writings (Siphrut: Literature and Theology of the Hebrew Scriptures), edited by Julius Steinberg and Timothy J. StoneYou can view annotations for this episode—plus our entire library of videos, podcasts, articles, and classes—in the BibleProject app, available for Android and iOS.Check out Tim’s extensive collection of recommended books here.SHOW MUSIC“StrollingThroughThePark ft. Goodiegumdrops” by Lofi Sunday“Radiance ft. solae” by Lofi SundayBibleProject theme song by TENTSSHOW CREDITSProduction of today’s episode is by Lindsey Ponder, producer, and Cooper Peltz, managing producer. Tyler Bailey is our supervising engineer, and he also edited today’s episode and provided the sound design and mix. JB Witty does our show notes, and Hannah Woo provides the annotations for our app. Our host and creative director is Jon Collins, and our lead scholar is Tim Mackie. Powered and distributed by Simplecast.
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The Hebrew Bible, what Christians call the Old Testament, is a collection of 24 scrolls.
These scrolls were passed down for generations, and they tell the long, complicated story
of Israel.
So who wrote these scrolls, and how did they all come together in a final collection?
So let's turn to the literary origins of the collection of books that Jewish tradition
calls the Tanakh or the Hebrew Bible.
At the heart of the Hebrew Bible is the first five scrolls called Torah.
And the central character in these scrolls is Moses, who is credited for writing much
of it down.
On one level, we are meant to see the five scroll work in its complete form, like you
and I would have, as being in continuity with and stamped with the authority of Moses.
But Moses didn't write all of the Torah, nor was he the one bringing the Torah to its final
shape.
There are other bits and pieces in the Torah that are not hiding themselves coming from
a post-Moses perspective.
So what we're looking at in these five books we called Torah is like a mosaic composition
that actually has material in it from different periods of Israel's history.
When later scrolls talk about who wrote Torah, it talks about a group called the prophets
responsible for the shaping not just of Torah but the rest of the Bible as well,
like in 2 Kings 17. Obey my commands and decrees in accordance with the whole Torah that I commanded
your ancestors to obey and that I delivered to you through my servants the prophets. So,
it's attributing the Torah to this crew called the prophets. Today, we'll explore this literary prophetic crew who stewarded the stories and poems and
law code of their ancestors and formed them into a highly designed literary work.
The Bible's not trying to pass itself off as the work of one or two inspired figures
alone. It doesn't hide the fact that it has a more
multi-generational, multi-stage compositional history.
And we'll look at the claim that what they're doing
is channeling the very voice of God.
The writing of it begins with Moses,
and then that begins the long partnership
of prophets and scribes receiving what came before,
contributing to it, and then the next generation keeps shaping and reshaping. So,
it's a tradition literature. And all of that, God's people confess was a process led by God's Spirit
and that the final that's before us is a thing through which we hear not just Moses, not just
David, not just Isaiah, We hear God addressing us.
Today we look at the formation of the Hebrew Bible. Thanks for joining us. Here we go.
Hey, Tim.
Hello, John. Hi.
Hey, so we just started a conversation around the making of the Bible. How did the Bible come to be?
Yep.
So, what we're going to do today is we're going to start from the beginning.
Yeah, we're going to go back in time and I'm going to take you through how I begin to
work on this question.
Of how the Bible was made.
Yeah, and to go back to the beginning and work forward.
So let's turn to the literary origins of the collection of books we call, not that we call actually,
the Jewish tradition calls the Tanakh or the Hebrew Bible.
What we call the Old Testament.
Christians call the Old Testament.
So there's a lot of ways you could try and start a conversation about where the Old Testament
slash Hebrew Bible comes from.
So I'll just try and do one moment here to say, if you start
reading a page one, what happens if you just track with keeping tabs on every time there's
mention of something being written down? That seems like it could be a fruitful approach.
It's one way, not the only way, but it's one way, and it's an interesting way. Yeah, okay. So that's what I'm gonna do. All right.
So you are 67 chapters into the Old Testament before there's any mention of something being written down. Okay, that's a lot of chapters.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, it's interesting. We talked a lot about Genesis 1 through 3, and God comes and He tells Adam and Eve, gives them these commands.
Mm-hmm.
He doesn't say, hey, write this down.
No. He just tells them these commands. He doesn't say, hey, write this down. No.
He just tells them the commands.
No.
In a way, you kind of hope that that doesn't have to happen.
You know what I mean?
Oh, sure.
If you have like a friend and there's some like important
thing you want to share, you know,
and ask them to change how they treat you,
or do something that they're not currently doing,
you hope you don't have to write it down. You just, you want to be able to say it once
and that they care about you enough
that they'll just like do it or not.
You know what I mean?
Sure, right.
So it kind of makes sense,
but what you're naming is it's the first kind of word of God.
Yeah, the first word of God is.
Oh, it's let there be light.
Sure, yeah, yeah.
Someone wrote that down at some point.
Right, but it's not mentioned of writing it down.
Got it.
So this is interesting, it's kind of a meta question. At what point in the Bible is the writing of the Bible first, like, talked about?
Yeah, yeah.
And you're at Exodus, second book of the Bible, chapter 17, before the first mention of something getting written down is mentioned.
So Israel's out in the wilderness.
They're out of Egypt, Exodus has all happened.
They're actually a couple months into the wilderness now.
And they just got some surprise water and sky goo bread.
So they're cruising through the wilderness and there is an ancient relative tribe
called the Amalekites that descends from Esau.
Okay.
So the brother of Jacob and they are out there in the desert and they see this escaped, you know,
group of slaves from Egypt going through the wilderness and they're like plunder.
They just see dollar signs.
Okay.
So they pounce.
Yeah. So they pounce. And amazingly, the Israelites are able to both defend themselves and defeat the Amalekites.
How?
It's the story of Moses goes up on a high rock and lifts his arms.
Joshua and another guy are there holding up his arms.
And when Israel wins the battle, Acts 17 verse 14, Yahweh said to Moses, write this as a memorial in a scroll.
Which means the story?
Exactly. This means the thing that just happened.
This salvation story, a deliverance story. Write it in a scroll. So it's the first time a scroll is mentioned.
It's the first time writing in a scroll and it's the first time an event that we are reading
of in the Bible is mentioned being written down.
So write it for remembering in a scroll in the hearing of Joshua.
There you go.
It's the first mention of the writing of the Bible in the Bible.
We're taking a lot of things for granted here.
Like, they just escaped from slavery.
I mean, in a hurry.
Totally, but we're also told they took a lot of stuff with them.
They took a lot of stuff with them.
So he's got some scroll technology with him.
Yeah.
And he can write. He knows how to write.
That's assumed here.
As a modern person, I kind of think, yeah, everyone knows how to write.
But in the ancient world, the time of Moses, especially,
that would have been a very rare skill to have.
That's right. Especially among a slave population, ancient Egypt, especially in that time period,
was actually at the height of literary sophistication
of ancient Egyptian culture.
I mean, the hieroglyphic writing tradition,
it's like well underway in this time period.
So, he knows how to write, that's just taken for granted.
Yeah.
What's interesting is, however, you presume
what he's writing though is in Hebrew,
not Egyptian. You assume because our oldest manuscripts are in Hebrew. Well, because the
story that is written down is in Hebrew. Yeah. But did Hebrew exist back then? Yes. Yeah, it did.
As a written language? Well, our oldest written evidence for ancient Hebrew is after the time of Moses, but Semitic
languages of the family to which Hebrew belongs were totally around.
Yeah.
Yes, for sure.
But there was Egyptian hieroglyphics, but did Semitic languages have their own writing
system?
Writing tradition. Yes. Our earliest evidence for the Semitic alphabet is hundreds of years old by the time
of Moses, depending on how you date Moses.
Oh, okay. It's been around.
Yeah. It's a good point. This story just assumes that he has the material and the ability to
write. So notice the first mention of the writing of the Bible in the Bible is about a little story
connected to how they were rescued. So in other words, even what they're writing down isn't just
an archival chronicle of everything that happened. They're preserving memories of identity forming
monumental events in the life of God and these people. The second mention of the writing
of the Bible in the Bible comes just a couple chapters later, and it's also Moses. This
is after Moses has gone up and down the mountain a whole bunch and brokered the covenant partnership
between God and Israel.
The mountain and the wilderness, the Sinai.
Thanks. So here, writing is connected to a formal agreement between two parties, namely God and a whole people group.
And so Moses comes down and he's got the Ten Commandments, he's got the dozens more commandments that come after the Ten,
and all of this represents what God's asking Israel to live by, to be his representatives, the
kingdom of priests to the nations.
So, Exodus 24, Moses came and he told the people all the words of the Lord.
So here he's just speaking it.
And the people answered with one voice and said, all the words that the Lord has spoken,
we're going to do that.
Then Moses wrote down all of those words.
There you go.
Yeah.
So what's great here is that the origins of the Bible are rooted in essentially these
two moments and almost can be symbolized by these two moments because the Old Testament
or the Hebrew Bible is first and foremost a story about what God has done and did to
form this family and people group
into a group of his partners through whom he wanted to do something in the world.
That's kind of what that first scene represents, a writing and a scroll.
Almost, you could say the whole biblical narrative, from Genesis to Second Kings and all the other books,
flow out of that basic idea.
This is the identity-forming story of of this family and it got written down not just to remember it,
but to shape every generation to see itself as part of this heritage.
But then also to be a part of that heritage means that every generation is in a living,
active covenant partnership with the God of Israel.
And that's what Mount Sinai represents.
So you could say the seed of the Hebrew Bible, of writing something down, is about a series
of documents that tell the story of our family and why we exist in the world and what God
we think is doing through our family.
And then a whole series of documents
that are all about making clear that covenant partnership
between God and Israel.
And almost the whole of the Hebrew Bible
can kind of fall under those two basic ideas.
Both the narrative and then focusing in on maybe
through laws or poetry, the nature of our relationship
to God and how the relationship's going.
So this is where it starts.
This is where it starts. This is where...
This is where the writing starts.
This is where the writing starts.
The events that precede this, like all the stuff about Abraham.
So all of that...
Isaac, Jacob, Joseph.
All of that would be material that Moses, at some point, as he's living among Israel,
all of that would have been stewarded through memorized oral tradition, maybe written tradition.
At some point it became written.
But that all is something Moses would have inherited and then after Moses would have
been passed down as source material.
And here's what's really interesting is, we know that Moses worked with source material,
and we know that the first five books,
the Torahs, we have it, is made up of source material.
One of the sources is actually named.
Hmm. In the scroll of Numbers, chapter 21, there's this moment where the Israelites are setting
out from one place to the next.
And when they go across a boundary of an ancient tribal relative called the Moabites, the narrator
stops and says, oh yeah, this is why it is said in the scroll of the wars of Yahweh, quote, and then it quotes this like ancient poem
about the establishment of the boundaries of these ancient peoples. So it's a good example where
the Torah itself wasn't all written at one go by Moses. It actually was compiled by material
that's connected to Moses writing, but then also is material that's older than Moses.
So what we're looking at in these five books we called Torah
is like a mosaic composition that actually has material in it
from different periods of Israel's history,
some precede Moses, from the time of Moses,
and then even there's material in it
that seems to clearly come
from after Moses.
The Scroll of the Wars of Yahweh, is this something Moses had access to or maybe it
was a later scribe?
Yeah, we have no idea.
Yeah, yeah.
This is the only time it's mentioned.
But the section that's quoted from this scroll, the Scroll of the Wars of Yahweh, is a really
it's like super ancient sounding Hebrew.
Oh, is it?
It's kind of, it sounds like the way great, great grandpa would have, Grandpa Moses.
Grandpa Moses?
Yeah, would have spoken Hebrew.
Okay, so it's an old, it's an old.
It feels like, this is a quote from an old text.
Okay.
You showed us a couple examples of Moses writing down stories or the commands of God that are
in the Torah.
Yeah, and there's a few other times where Moses has mentioned writing after the ones that we looked at.
Yeah, there's more, okay.
There's no story, not that there has to be, but there's no story of Moses sitting down and compiling everything into one collection called the Torah.
Right?
Near the end of Deuteronomy, which is right before his death on the edge of the promised land as Israelites are about to go in.
There is a moment that's being presented as kind of like the finishing of his literary work.
It's in Deuteronomy 31. What's interesting is not only is he connected to the writing of narratives in the Torah,
also connected to writing down the covenant laws, but also God tells him right here in Deuteronomy 30 and 31
that hey, listen, the people are gonna go into the land after you die
and they're gonna blow it. They're gonna break the covenant.
So what I want you to do is write a song
that will preview that disaster
and stand here as a witness to every future generation
that you saw this coming.
And that even Israel's sin won't cancel the covenant relationship that I'm gonna do something in the future to renew it and restore it and rescue them.
But it needs to be written now so that they can look at it in the future and be like, this is like a witness, a prophetic witness.
So he writes this poem, we call it Deuteronomy chapter 32. And then all of that, we're told at the end of Deuteronomy,
gets brought together. And so I'm reading from Deuteronomy 31 here, it says,
Then when Moses finished writing the words of this Torah on the scroll until they were finished or complete.
And it's referring here to, it's hard to know a lot, but it's got the poem in mind.
It's got covenant laws in mind.
And you know, these are the stories you wrote.
So the question is, is he finishing a version of the Torah that we are reading?
And I think there's actually,
there's multiple ways to answer that.
I think on one level,
we are meant to see the five scroll work
in its complete form,
like you and I would have,
as being in continuity with and coming,
like stamped with the authority of Moses.
But there are also some other bits and pieces in the Torah
that are not hiding themselves, that are just blinking red lights
in terms of marking themselves as coming from a post-Moses perspective.
And so the biblical authors don't hide that either.
So I think it's more that the Torah is connected to the prophetic authority and witness of Moses.
But that didn't exclude there being later shaping of the Torah as it became integrated with the larger body of material.
Can I show you some examples?
Yeah.
Okay. So an interesting one is in Genesis, so it's long before Moses has ever mentioned his writing.
It's a story about Abraham and it's the story of Abraham binding Isaac up on Mount Moriah.
And right after the angel tells Abraham, stop, don't sacrifice your son, then the narrator steps
in and says, Abraham called the name of that place, Yahweh will see to it.
And then the narrator says, and that, dear reader, is why today?
We say this, on the mountain of Yahweh, He will see to it.
You're like, what?
And when is today?
When is today?
Yeah.
And what's the mountain of Yahweh?
Right.
The mountain of Yahweh is a phrase used all throughout the Hebrew prophets to refer to the temple mount on Jerusalem.
Yeah.
This is linking that what Abraham did to surrender everything on Mount Moriah is what is being symbolized and replayed in the sacrificial rituals at the Jerusalem temple still today.
And that Yahweh provided that system as a gift to us.
It's like a little editorial note.
It is from a future voice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's just right there.
It doesn't make any sense actually if you see that this is written from the time of Moses.
Right.
There's a whole genealogy in Genesis chapter 36 that's tracing the line of Esau,
Jacob's brother, and as it's tracing that lineage of Esau,
it just says at a certain moment, oh yeah, here's a list of the kings who reigned in
the land of Edom, you know, before any kings ever reigned over the Israelites.
You're like, wait, we don't have any of our kings until many centuries after Moses.
Okay.
So it's another future voice.
Another future voice.
The last chapter of the Torah, Deuteronomy 34, narrates the death of Moses. Okay. So it's another future voice. Another future voice. The last chapter of the Torah, Deuteronomy 34 narrates the death of Moses and then says
what happened right after the death of Moses and the last paragraph of the Torah says,
never again has a prophet like Moses arisen.
So somebody's writing at least the ending of the Torah way down the line in Israel's
history.
So can I show you one more thing?
Yeah, yeah.
Very interesting.
Later references in the Hebrew Bible to the origins of the Torah attribute the Torah to Moses and the prophets.
Super interesting. in a speech that the narrator gives in the book of 2 Kings,
talking about how when the northern tribes got conquered by the Assyrian Empire,
this is like in the 700s BC,
and the narrator says, yeah, this was really sad, tragic,
and it happened because these tribes weren't faithful to the covenant.
And what he says is, 2 Kings chapter 17 verse 13,
Yahweh warned Israel and Judah through all of his prophets, plural, saying,
turn from your evil ways, this is a quotation from the prophets, turn from your evil ways, obey my
commands and decrees in accordance with the whole Torah that I commanded your ancestors to obey
and that I delivered to you
through my servants the prophets.
So Moses isn't even mentioned here.
It's just saying the whole Torah
came through my servants the prophets.
So it's attributing-
But Moses was a prophet.
He was, he was the archetypal prophet.
So it's attributing the Torah to this gift of just this crew called the prophets.
My servant the prophets.
What it's saying is actually there's a whole body of divine instruction connected to the
covenant that here is just called the whole Torah.
The whole Torah.
That comes from my servant the prophets.
And you can just as quick note for listeners,
you can write if you're taking notes,
Daniel chapter nine verse 10,
Zechariah chapter seven verse 12,
these are also two places where the law, the Torah,
is connected as coming to Israel,
Daniel says through his servants, the prophets,
Zechariah says, the Torah and the words that Yahweh sent by his Spirit through the prophets.
So there's this focus that the human vehicle is actually less important than God speaking through them,
which in Zechariah is just the Spirit. The Spirit gave us the Torah.
So that's interesting.
Through the prophets.
Through the prophets.
A group, yeah.
Moses being the first. Through the prophets. A group, yeah.
Moses being the first.
The first one.
So within the Hebrew Bible itself, the Torah is viewed as a mosaic.
A mosaic meaning?
Being composed of material that comes from different times and places.
It wasn't all just written at one go, one day,
at the foot of Mount Sinai.
Yeah, at the end of Moses' life.
Right.
It's a compilation of material.
And it tells you that and shows you that.
And it also shows you that the origins of it,
in some ways, are really connected to the activity of Moses.
But it concerns stuff that happened before Moses.
Like that all came from
somewhere. And then also that Moses wasn't the only one involved in the shaping of the
Torah that actually also was passed down to a community just called the prophets. So what's
interesting is that in the shape of the Hebrew Bible, you have the first big two parts that
are called the Torah and the prophets.
So, like, what are the prophets all about?
And the prophets basically narrate the thing that Moses foretold, which is you're going to go into the land, you're going to blow it,
you're going to get exiled from the land, and God's going to say, I told you so, and the story's not over.
And that's essentially what the next section of the revival is about in short form.
Joshua judges Samuel Kings, they go into the land,
it goes horrible, they get kicked out.
And then you get the writings of all these other prophets,
Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the 12.
And every one of those,
the beginnings of those prophetic scrolls
have all been designed with hyperlinks that link you back
in to the storyline of the Torah and prophets. And specifically, these prophets are cast as
Moses-like figures. They all have an encounter with God that's like a burning bush type encounter.
They all speak messages of challenge to their generation based on the Ten Commandments.
They all speak warnings of disaster.
They all speak of a message of hope.
So they're like little mini-Moses.
And that's how the Torah and the prophets are united.
And so we could just go on through the prophets and it's the same thing.
There's literary activity mentioned now and then.
So Samuel, for example, was a key leader
in the book after his name.
Though it's funny, Samuel dies halfway
through the book of Samuel.
Even though it's named after him.
Moses dies at the very end of Deuteronomy.
Yeah, Samuel dies in the middle of Samuel.
So he clearly didn't write most of it,
but he wrote some of it, you know, comes from him.
In chapter 10 of 1 Samuel, we're told that he wrote down a bunch of things
connected to a key moment with the people. There's also the mention of a lot of sources in the prophetic books. There's a book called The Scroll of Yashar, and it's quoted from a couple
times, Joshua 10 and 2 Samuel 1. The scrolls of the chronicles of the kings of Israel and Judah is mentioned about 20
times in the book of 1 and 2 Kings.
So you can kind of do a similar thing where you can piece together Joshua to Kings and
then with all the writings of prophets as a mosaic.
Comes from lots of different times.
But at some point it started getting brought together into these literarily connected, coordinated holes.
At some point being brought together and these clear editorial markers we looked at, of like,
oh yeah, this was the time before the kings or this was why in Jerusalem we say this.
Those are clearly from another time when this was all being brought together.
Yeah, here's a great example.
So in the prophets, you get the former prophets that tell you the story of Israel going into
the land and it going terribly.
So the book of Judges represents a period not long after the time of Moses.
There's Joshua and then he dies and then there's the period of the Judges.
There's a story from that period in Judges chapter 18 about these Israelites who build a shrine with idols in it.
And then in Judges 18 verse 30, what you're told is that the descendants of Israel who made this idolatrous shrine
was led by this guy named Jonathan, the son of Gershom, the son of Moses.
It's straight up Moses' grandson, who's building an idolatrous shrine in the land.
And it says he and his sons were priests for the tribe of the Danites up until the time of the captivity of the land.
So that's referring forward to an event when the northern tribes
were taken out by Assyria in the 700s. So whoever's writing this is telling a story
from like the 10 hundreds BC. But referring explicitly to an event from 300 years later.
So whoever wrote this line comes after that. So it's another example.
So clearly the final shape came much later.
But it's made of lots of material from lots of earlier periods.
Just like the Torah.
Right. And we don't have like a manuscript history of all that stuff.
So this is all just kind of taking their word for it that these were written down.
Inference, yeah. Inference. They say there's quoting from scrolls.
Well yeah, okay, that one. When they said like Moses then wrote it down or...
We're taking it at face value.
We're taking it at face value. That maybe they do have a document of like, hey, this is the document handed down to us from Moses.
It wouldn't be the original. No.
But we're just guessing here.
It's more than a guess.
It's like a reasonable inference.
Yeah.
Meaning?
Like this literature didn't pop out of thin air.
Sure.
And the literature gives an account
of its own origins within itself.
And you could say, I don't believe any of that.
And I think it was just written by some Israelite
sitting in Babylonian exile, just made it all up
out of their head.
OK, well, if you want to claim that,
you need to give an account for why every single part
of this literature and how it came into existence.
And you hit problems real quick, if that's your hypothesis.
You're like, well, how would anybody know the geography or the history of the land from
half a millennium before?
And the fact that they do talk about specific scrolls, it's easy to infer there was literary
traditions going on.
Oh, totally.
It's unreasonable to take an overly skeptical view and not read these at face value. I think.
There's people who disagree, but I respectfully disagree.
And so, the prophets then.
We're talking about figures along this whole history.
Beginning with Moses.
Beginning with Moses. But this is including also like an Isaiah figure.
Yeah, yes, exactly. And he, in his poetry and in the narrative about him,
even the book of Isaiah and how it comes into existence
is in a way a little micro parallel for one scroll
of how a book like the Torah came into existence
because Isaiah's writing down is mentioned within Isaiah,
but then the shaping of the whole of Isaiah
comes from somebody who's tried to coordinate it
with Jeremiah and Ezekiel and Deuteronomy,
and all of a sudden.
Okay, and who's this somebody?
Yeah, we don't know.
The prophets, actually they're called the prophets.
They're called the prophets.
That's right.
But this isn't like Jeremiah doing it, this is.
Maybe. Maybe. He certainly had a doing it. This is... Maybe. Maybe?
He certainly had a part to play.
Okay.
Yeah.
But there was some sort of like editorial...
Crew.
Crew.
Support.
With the aid of the Spirit bringing together everything.
And they're the ones that were doing the final stitching.
Yeah. So Moses is mentioned as committing his scrolls and writings to a group just called
the Levites at the end of Deuteronomy. Isaiah mentions a group around himself,
he calls them the Talmudim, the disciples. And he gives over his written material to them in
Isaiah chapter 8, and he calls what he's written to them, he calls it Torah and Witness,
which is what Moses called his writings, the laws of the Torah and his prophetic poem as a witness.
And then he gives it to the Talmudim, his students.
Jeremiah has a scribe, a friend named Baruch. What's cool is in Jeremiah there's a whole chapter dedicated to the origin story of the book that you're reading.
And you learn that what you're reading is at least edition two, because edition one got burned up by a king.
And it tells you at the end of Jeremiah 36 that Baruch added many similar words to these as edition one.
So it's actually telling you that Baruch played a contributing role in composing the material in what we call the Jeremiah Scroll.
It doesn't hide it. That's what's so great. It's like the Bible's not trying to pass itself off as like the work of one or two inspired figures alone.
Right. Yeah.
That's how we might think of it, but that's not how it presents itself.
Yeah, I think that's how it was presented to me. Not really officially. Like, I didn't take like
a here's how the Bible was formed class. It wasn't like in our doctrinal statement. But
what people would talk about a lot is the Bible is completely trustworthy
without errors. Like you can trust it. Like that was a really important thing. And I guess
the easiest story for then how that could come to be then was, well, I can't have this
messy history where a lot of people were involved. Like God must have just zapped one dude, Moses.
Or a series of dudes.
Or a series of guys throughout the history, but kind of working primarily through one at a time
to just kind of like, here's what I want to say, just write it down exactly as I'm dictating to you.
That's kind of a cleaner story that kind of lets you feel more like, well then, then I can trust it.
Yeah, that's right. It is a cleaner story. It's simpler. I think the problem is the Bible itself.
Yeah, it doesn't hide it.
It doesn't hide the fact that it has a more multi-generariah to say all of the Zechariah chapter 7 verse 12,
the Torah and the words that Yahweh Almighty sent by His Spirit through the prophets.
The Torah and the words.
I think actually probably what he has in mind is the Torah and prophets as he knew them.
I mean, he lives after the exile.
So he's got a conception of this...
Body of work.
Body of work that can be called the Torah and the words sent by the Spirit through the prophets.
And Daniel had the same perception around the same time period.
Now you mentioned Jeremiah Baruch. Baruch was a scribe.
He was a professional scribe.
So he wasn't considered a prophet. Jeremiah was the prophet, Baruch was the scribe. Exactly. So that's a great example where what's foregrounded actually is really God's word through the prophet.
That's what matters, is that when people heard Jeremiah, actually when people heard Jeremiah, they thought he was crazy or a rebel. And only once his warnings came true did people recognize the Word of God
was speaking through him. But Baruch was right there helping compile, arrange the material
in what we call the Jeremiah scroll so that later generations could hear God's Word through
Jeremiah.
So what Zechariah is saying though is he says the Spirit works through the prophets.
It doesn't say Spirit works through the prophets and the scribes.
Oh, sure, sure.
I hear that, yes, that's right.
But Baruch's work is in the service of the word of God spoken through the prophet.
Okay, so the scribes working in service of the prophets.
Maybe what's at issue here is concepts of authorship. Yes. We work with concepts of authorship that are shaped by
half a millennium of post-printing press. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like who wrote Moby-Dick?
Sure. That's really easy. That's right. What we're asking is much more similar to what's saying who
wrote Homer's Odyssey. Like, was there a Homer?
I think it's reasonable to conclude that there was.
You know what's interesting? There's debates about Shakespeare.
Yes, there is. That's right.
Like the historical figure, how much did he write?
Yep. Exactly. So this isn't a modern only question. And it's also important to say that
ancient conceptions of authorship work differently. A helpful entry point here, if somebody's interested,
we've referred to the work of John Walton,
a Hebrew Bible scholar, many times over the years.
And he's written a series of books called
The Lost World of X, to help us learn how to think more
with an ancient mindset when it comes to things
in the Bible.
He wrote a helpful book called The Lost World of Scripture.
And it's really an introduction to how ancient people thought about texts,
and then how ancient people thought about scriptural texts. And authorship is one,
he covers it in great detail. It's really helpful. But when these individuals are named,
what's not being claimed is that they wrote every word. But they were the key figure connected to both the origin of this text and to the divine
word of God speaking to every generation through it.
So the person is important, but the claim is not that the whole thing as we have it
is exactly what they wrote before they died. We've given a very brief account of Torah and prophets.
Sure, yeah.
When it comes to the third collection of the Tanakh, the writings.
Ketavim?
Yeah, we've got a diverse collection of texts, a lot of it poetry, like the Psalms, for example. Psalms is a 150-poem
collection and we think of it as primarily connected to David because David is connected
to 73 in the Hebrew Bible tradition of the 150 poems.
Okay. Song of David.
Songs of David were connected to David. But there are many other poets named within the introductions
to the Psalms. A guy named He-Man, he's my favorite. A guy named Ethan, a bunch of anonymous
Psalms. But all of them are connected in some way to the Levite choirs that sung in the
temple. And there's one from Moses, one from Solomon. But you can look at, actually it's
a great example. You can look at a second
temple Jewish author who's anonymous, who wrote a book that's in the New Testament.
We call it the Letter to the Hebrews. And whoever wrote Hebrews really was into the
Psalms, like really into the Psalms. Especially the Psalm we call Psalm 95. And when the author of Hebrews is quoting from Psalm 95, he assigns two authors to the Psalm.
The first time that he quotes from Psalm 95, he simply says, as the Holy Spirit says.
So he foregrounds the divine voice speaking to Israel through the Holy Spirit.
But then in chapter 4 when he quotes from Psalm 95, he names as it says in the poem,
through David or in David.
So now all of a sudden we've got a human author and a divine author, both are connected to
Psalm 95.
If you turn back to Psalm 95 in the Hebrew Bible,
what you find is it's not even explicitly connected to David.
Like there are 73 poems connected to David explicitly,
and Psalm 95 is not one of them.
So it's clear that what matters for the author of the Hebrews
is that we're hearing the voice of the Spirit through all the Psalms. Yeah, and it's in the tradition of David.
And David's associated with so many and with the root of the Psalm tradition, where it comes from,
like the temple, that he can also in another place just say, as it says in David.
Yeah.
But what he means is the scroll of the Psalms that explicitly tells you it comes from lots of
different authors. For me, when that example sunk in, I realized that's a great way to think of all of the books of the Hebrew Bible.
What matters is the Holy Spirit speaking through them, and we can refer to the small list of key
figures while at the same time acknowledging that there was a host of scribes around those key figures,
that there was a host of scribes around those key figures, and all of them and the whole process was a part of the way the Holy Spirit speaks to His people.
And so that's the key. The key is this pretty bold belief that the Spirit of God
worked through all of these people who had all sorts of literary traditions, bringing them together,
collecting them into what you're calling a mosaic, and bringing them into a unified shape.
There were prophets involved, there were scribes involved.
It wasn't done all at once in like one sitting, but it was done through the Spirit.
Yeah, that's right. That's an important claim that is, incidentally, as much and not more that Paul claims in a
pretty famous line in the New Testament in his letter to Timothy.
So this is now representing one of the apostles commissioned by Jesus to represent him.
Paul.
Paul.
And he's writing a letter to a young protege. It is named Timothy. It's a great name.
Great name.
You know what's funny is I never really think about that.
What's that?
You guys share the name.
Oh yeah. Yeah, Timothy. Yep. Yeah. So, and what we call too Timothy in the New Testament now,
he talks about, hey, Timothy, man, you just need to keep growing.
As you lead the church in Ephesus that I asked you to lead for a time, here's the number
one thing, keep continuing on in the things that you've learned and are convinced of,
because you know the people from whom you learned it.
You were educated by, and actually what's cool is he names his mom and his grandma in
the letter,
and then himself as the primary people who he's learned from. It's pretty cool.
And then he says, from childhood, you've known the sacred writings that are able to give you wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in the Messiah Jesus. So he's referring to
not the New Testament.
The sacred writings.
Because it doesn't exist yet.
Yeah.
So he's referring to the Tanakh, the Old Testament.
The Hebrew Bible. We're probably in a Greek translation for Timothy, which actually that's
important for our next conversation.
The Hebrew Bible and Greek translation in the early Christian movement. So he's clearly
referring to scripture. And then he says, right, all Scripture, and then he uses a word, maybe even coins a word here,
Theanustas, or Theapneustas, God-spirited, all Scripture is God-spirited.
So, he's putting the word God and spirit and mashing them into a compound word that's reflecting a similar view, you know, as Daniel or Zechariah did,
or the author to the Hebrews, which is to say the people were crucial and what they
wrote is how the Spirit, God's agency and voice works in and through a human. That's
what he means. So he doesn't say Moses and Isaiah were inspired, that's
true, but what he says is the text themselves. So interesting.
The scripture is God-spirited.
The scripture is. The final product is. So he doesn't attach inspiration to individuals.
What final product? Because like you said, they had a Greek translation of the Hebrew
Bible.
Yes, so that's what we'll pick up in our next conversation,
is how the Hebrew Bible was then received.
Back to my question a moment ago,
when did we like, you know.
Next conversation.
Stamp this as like, this is it, we're done,
send it to the printer.
Next step, that's next step.
Because remember, we're going from the beginning.
But from the beginning, we have a growing mosaic, but it's not a free-for-all.
This is about the foundation story of what God's doing to rescue a people and then to invite them into a covenant partnership.
Remember, those are the two mentions of writing. They are right there, Exodus 17 and 24. Tell the story,
how God saved us. Make clear the covenant expectations that Israel is to live by to
represent God to the nations. That in essence is what the Hebrew Bible is about. And the writing
of it begins with Moses, but then it's connected to the Levites around him, to whom he passes it off.
And then that begins the long partnership of prophets and scribes receiving what came before,
contributing to it, what happened and what God said in their time.
And then the next generation takes that and keeps shaping and reshaping.
So it's a tradition literature to which many generations,
literary efforts, you know, contributed. And all of that is God's Spirit. And all of that,
God's people confess was a process led by God's Spirit and that the final thing that's before us
is a thing through which we hear not just Moses, not just David, not just Isaiah, we hear God addressing us.
For the purpose of wisdom that leads to rescue.
Being rescued, and then to a communal way of life
that represents God faithfully in the world.
The purpose of these texts is to form a people
who represent God.
Which then Paul just says, you know, for teaching and correction and training and righteousness.
Yes, that's right. Yeah.
So, there's so much more we could do in the crash course about the making of the Hebrew Bible.
And we'll talk about it more in the next episode because what I want to go next is then,
where did this big three-part collection in Hebrew,
as it comes into its final formation, the final events mentioned in it are like in Esther
or Ezra Nehemiah, and you're in the now 400s BC.
The final books in the collection, which means whatever the final book is, when it's added into the collection, it's connected in a way that all of it is now hyperlinked
to each other.
In other words, when Esther gets added,
it's more than likely that there were some other
little tweaks made in other parts of the collection
to welcome Esther into the family, as it were.
More than likely, because you can't imagine that, like,
okay, like a scroll is completed, it's
done, don't touch it, let's just add the new one.
But you're saying that it's more than likely that there was adaptations along the way.
Yeah, I mean this word, we could do many episodes just drilling down into specific examples,
but maybe an analogy that's very helpful actually that I got from two scholars, Julius Steinberg and Timothy Stone,
called The Shape of the Writings. And they're essentially trying to write an account for the shape of that third section of the Hebrew Bible, the ketuvim.
And they use this great analogy. They say, we imagine that the books of the Hebrew Bible came into existence, like if you were to walk into a modern day garden nursery, and you go to the tree section, and you'd see all
these trees standing there, and they're each one connected to a singular big pot on the
ground.
Let's say it's like, I don't know, the Japanese maples or something.
So each tree stands by itself, but they're standing next to each other because they're
similar.
And so at some point that morning, somebody got a new load off the truck that came or whatever, and they grouped them together and then put a little cord around the circle.
And it's like, there they are. That's the collection of that.
Okay.
And we tend to think of the books of the Bible like that.
Yeah.
Like here's Isaiah, and it was forged.
And then it just was scooted into the collection.
We potted it over here, yeah.
And they say an alternative metaphor they propose,
I think it's more accurate and more helpful,
is that the Hebrew Bible is much more like the development
and growth of an aspen grove of trees.
So aspen trees, super interesting.
I mean, after they proposed this metaphor, I did a bunch of Wikipedia reading to learn about aspen trees.
But the way aspen groves develop is that there's always an original root ball of one kind of stand of trees.
And then when an aspen forest grows,
it's all happening underground.
And it's actually one organism.
And you can have a huge forest that's like many square miles.
That's one organism.
And you can actually trace it back to the original root ball.
And then that root ball has given
birth to, so to speak, new organically connected trees.
Yeah, one root system.
Yes, but then also what happens is that the health and the development now of those two
trees will influence each other as they grow, because one is drawing from the other and
connected to it, but then it works vice versa.
And so, in a similar way, the shape of the Torah was influenced by the growth of the prophets.
Like that little ending of Deuteronomy that says, hey, no prophet has ever come like Moses.
It's coming from the perspective of somebody who's got a knowledge of a collection of prophetic literature.
But then vice versa, that all of the prophets have been shaped in light of the Torah.
And so, really, any time a book entered the collection, it affected things all over the whole collection.
Sure.
That's something more like how the Hebrew Bible came into existence.
That's something more like how the Hebrew Bible came into existence. So if what you are concerned about is, is this God's word, then you can say, okay, well,
then the Spirit of God worked through all of those people and all those iterations.
Yeah.
And we'll talk about later, like, at what point did that get concluded?
Yeah.
But I think another question on people's minds are, well, is what written here actually what
happened?
Oh, sure.
And can I trust that this is true to reality?
And as soon as you start talking about things being added, it just starts to feel a little
less reliable in a sense of like, this is a historical document, I suppose.
Yeah.
Ultimately, we want to know, can
we trust this? And I guess ultimately we want to trust, is this really wisdom for salvation
through Jesus? Like, that's what Paul was interested in. And will this train us in righteousness?
But there's another part of me, I guess, that's always kind of like, well, can I trust this
that like, these things actually went down? Yeah, that's a fantastic question.
And I resonate with it deeply in my own journey
of this whole set of questions.
I'm going to appeal to a parallel question.
So you could ask the same question.
If you believe that God became human
to save and rescue humans and remake the creation,
that's like kind of foundations of Christian belief.
All of that hope is centered on a person named Jesus, Jesus Messiah or Jesus Christ.
The four accounts that come from the earliest apostles tell us Jesus was a Jewish man who grew up
in a small town in Israel speaking Hebrew and Aramaic, you know, probably enough Greek
and Latin to like get by, you know.
And you know, he was influenced by the climate of Northern Galilee, you know, and he was raised in a certain synagogue with certain family members,
very particular, right? And actually, you know, the accounts that we have of him come from his
earliest followers, but from after his resurrection. So those accounts are shaped by not just like
video camera footage type perspective, but from a later perspective.
So you could ask the same question of the four gospel accounts,
because what we're being scandalized or challenged by is this claim
that God's way of revealing God's self is through actual human activity, through human people.
through actual human activity, through human people. And for these people involved, through things that were happening in the course of their lives
and through the normal processes of like living down and writing texts
and producing collections of texts in the ancient world.
So it's not something you can prove, but it is something we are being asked to trust the testimony of these prophets
that they are giving us an account that represents this family history that reveals the truth about the world.
And it's actually very similar to what Christians believe already for the most part about Jesus. In other words, are you scandalized by the fact that Jesus grew up at a particular place
in time, or that particular sayings that he gave were influenced by what happened in the
news that day, or what the weather was like on a certain day?
And if that doesn't bother you as much, how is that different than the Book of Isaiah
or the Torah coming into existence through multiple generations of scribes adding to it
based on things that they sensed or heard God saying in later times?
Does that make sense, the parallel I'm drawing?
If the fact that Jesus was a human, God become human doesn't scandalize you.
What feels scandalous about God speaking by His Spirit through normal human scribal processes
in the making of the Hebrew Bible?
I have a level of comfort of just saying God's working through humans and that we don't need
to make this human and divine distinction where like,
if God's word didn't drop out cleanly from heaven
in some way untouched by humans, then I can't trust it.
Yes, yeah.
And what I am trusting is this literary culture
and process that took place,
but not just that it had its own literary culture
and process of them trying to work out their family history,
but that was guided by God's Spirit.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, I think I could get there.
Maybe another way to say is the only reason you and I read these texts is because we follow Jesus.
Right.
And that's how Jesus viewed this collection of texts.
Yeah.
As a gift from the Spirit through human authors that represents the story of what God's doing
for Israel and for the world and that represents God's Word, speaks God's Word.
Yeah.
So, it's a confession I make about these texts also because I'm only reading them
because I follow Jesus, you know.
Yeah.
But we're trusting Jesus on that point, and then Jesus is trusting
that these texts are what they say they are on that point. And I think that's the point
you're just honestly reckoning with.
And then I think the proof is in the pudding in that if the point is wisdom for salvation
and for like training in righteousness, the thing that I have experienced through this project with you
is encountering the wisdom of God and having it shape how I think and then how I exist in the world
and see that work through communities. And that's the point.
Yes. Yeah, that's right. Wisdom. I mean, we just read it in what Paul's description sure comes from a divine human partnership
called inspiration.
And the goal is to give us wisdom about the thing that God is up to in history to remake the world
through Messiah Jesus and that these texts to remake the world through Messiah Jesus, and that these
texts, if the community embraces them, can just reorient how you see everything and then
how we live and relate to each other. And that is what these texts are for, and why
these texts came into existence in the first place.
Yeah, and I guess to say, what I brought up, can I trust these things took place in history. You showed us maybe in the last hour
how Paul used the names of Pharaoh's magicians.
Oh, in the previous conversation.
Yeah, the previous conversation.
Yes, Yonais and Yombris.
Yonais and Yombris.
But they're not named in the Exodus scroll.
No.
They're named much, much later.
So likely that's not their name, right?
That's likely true. It would be. So likely that's not their name, right? Likely true.
It's it would be pretty wild that that's actually their name.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It'd be 1500 years of remembering two random addiction guys' names.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, totally.
So I guess sometimes I get really hung up as like, well, I want to know what their name is.
And I want to know if this exact detail happened in this exact way.
I think that's why I brought up if this is being crafted much later by a group of people
who are comfortable changing certain things or adding certain things.
Literary creativity, that's what we've called it.
It's about history of the project.
The biblical authors are balancing representing their family history and how they saw God reveal God's
self through that history. And they are presenting it in a highly creative way to help us understand
the meaning of those events.
Obviously being creative and what they're doing.
And symbolic names is a really important tool in that toolkit for the biblical authors.
Yeah. For example, Cain and Abel, Abel's name means...
Vapor.
Vapor. And he's the guy who just like vanishes as the story moves on pretty quick. So it makes you
think like, was that the name he was given by birth? Or is this supposed to teach me something,
and give me wisdom? And this wisdom is for my salvation and for my training
in righteousness. And so, when I get more interested in the latter and less interested
in the former, I think that's when...
Yeah. And I think it's important to hold on to both. It's not a problem we're going to
solve. It's a creative tension. It matters that this is representing a family's history that's recounting how they
heard from God through their history.
Right. And their actual history. They actually came through history as a people.
That's important. Just like it's important to me that Jesus actually rose from the dead.
I should really go do something different if that didn't happen in terms of vocationally with my life. But at the same time, the way that the biblical authors help me understand the meaning and
significance of those events is through shaping these texts with literary creativity. And that
those two convictions are in tension with each other. I feel it too. And I don't know how to resolve it and I never have.
But what I found is when I don't try
and make it all one or the other,
it's all creative fiction,
or it's all just video camera footage written down.
Either of those is overcompensating for my discomfort.
And neither one's gonna help me really appreciate
these texts on their own terms.
I don't know any other way around it.
Yeah. You bring up Jesus' death and resurrection.
Like, as Paul says, if Jesus didn't rise from the dead, if that's just a creative remix of the story to help you
Yeah. Be inspired to live a better life.
Be inspired to appreciate something through its literary artistry, then it's like, well,
what's the point?
No, that's right.
I can imagine some fear, like someone listening, going like, well, you just kind of cracked
open the door, and now, like, at what point is this all going to just fly away?
I really can't trust any of it.
But it seems like you feel grounded in your faith and in following Jesus while dealing
with this tension.
Yeah, but it's taken me a long time.
Yeah, it's taken me a long time to get there.
And what I'm not saying is I think like most of the Bible's creative fiction, I actually
don't think that.
I think that it's historically trustworthy, but what do we mean exactly when we say trustworthy?
And I think I have just been forced to nuance what I mean by trustworthy to allow for a
partnership of historical testimony and literary creativity.
And the Spirit.
And the work of the Spirit.
God speaking to people through highly creative texts that are about a family history
that actually happened.
Like, we're at the point of where I want a kind of certainty that I just don't think
exists for human beings, especially when it comes to events in the past.
Yeah, that's true.
And knowledge of like the most transcendent questions.
I think we can have trust and confidence.
It's a very different kind of thing than certainty.
This will probably come up again in the next couple of episodes.
Okay.
What we're going to talk about next is how the Hebrew Bible then was received as it got
passed down into Second Temple Judaism when it stopped being formed.
Yeah.
And then how it was received into early Christianity
and translated into Greek
and then became the Old Testament.
And then really became the foundation
for the next collection in the Christian Bible,
the writings of the apostles called the New Testament.
So we'll take the next step.
Great.
That's it for today's episode.
Next week, we look at the Jewish literary culture of the Second Temple Period and how
the prophetic scribes brought the Hebrew Bible to its final form.
Later shapers of the Tanakh think of it as one thing.
Even though it's on multiple different scrolls, the hyperlinking coordinated
nature of it makes it so that really it's just one thing in their hearts and in their minds.
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