ERETZ ISRAEL
Features the Bible's
story in 11 sessions with 475 slides & 51/2
hrs audio.
Interested in an overview of the Bible?
Interested in Biblical archaeology?
Want to see the Land of Israel?
here's the
place to start ! |
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SCOPE, APPROACH, & ISSUES |
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| OLD TESTAMENT PREVIEWS |
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| NEW TESTAMENT PREVIEWS |
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| HOMEPAGE |
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?QUESTIONS/COMMENTS?
bob@olive-tree.net |
ERETZ ISRAEL will span
much of the Bible, beginning with Abraham, the progenitor of the
nation of Israel, then progress through the remainder of the Old
and New Testaments in the eleven distinct Sessions shown above,
so that the entire Biblical span of Jewish occupation in the Land
may be viewed. The focus is on "what" happened
historically, so archaeology and geography are incorporated into
the episodes along the way so that you may better put Bible
stories into their proper settings.
This
material was conceived after an extended trip to Israel in 1984,
when I had the opportunity to study the Land of Israel in detail.
The material draws from notes, lectures, field trips, and
subsequent historical and archaeological studies of the Land over
the years since the trip. It was originally organized in the form
of a Seminar that was given to various audiences, and here is
adapted to an Internet format using text, slides, and RealAudio.
HOPE
YOU ENJOY ERETZ ISRAEL!!!
Since the REDEMPTIVE
PLAN portion of OLIVE TREE STUDIES has already devoted
considerable effort toward showing that the Bible may be treated
as an historical book with dates that are quite precise, those
dates and time periods will be used here in ERETZ ISRAEL.
However, the primary intent is to provide a composite, flowing
picture of Bible times in a way that can be easily viewed. Almost
500 slides and over 5 1/2 hours of RealAudio cover the eleven
Sessions so that you may simply look and listen (Some Scriptures
have been added to the Frames so that you may see where the
particular story being viewed is found in the Bible).
You may obtain a
RealAudio player at the following location if you do not already
have one.
To
get RealAudio 
Each of the eleven
Sessions vary in their length of viewing time from about 20
minutes to over an hour. However, they don't need to be viewed in
any particular order, so just review the brief summary of each
one below, then pick the Session of greatest interest within your
time available.
Archaeology is the
study of ancient cultures, conducted by examining their physical
remains. Biblical archaeology focuses on such remains primarily
in the Near East as they are related to the Bible, but although
Biblical Archaeology obviously deals with subjects related to the
Bible, its primary objectives are not to "prove" its
accuracy or historicity. Nevertheless as we will see, Biblical
Archaeology has already demonstrated the historical and
geographical reliability of the Bible in many important areas,
making it a potentially valuable tool to incorporate in ERETZ
ISRAEL.
Biblical Archaeology
has become a very complex science, making use of the most recent
advances in technology, so that a lay person must be dependent on
the interpretation of finds provided by professional
archaeologists. Of course, these scientists also hold private
views relative to the Bible, causing them to approach their
profession from different perspectives. As with most other
segments of society, a few have a high view of the Bible, holding
it to be the Word of God, while others take the view that it
should be regarded as mythology or is simply reflective of
ancient traditions. A few archaeologists today who write on
Biblically related subjects even disregard it completely,
claiming that the Bible is irrelevant to the subject of
"Biblical" Archaeology. In recent years, these
divisions have become so dissident and divisive that truth
concerning numerous topics within Biblical Archaeology has become
obscured.
Now the entire thrust
of OLIVE TREE STUDIES has adopted an approach that the Bible is
reliable and historically accurate. In fact, it is felt that the
extensive work by Edwin Thiele cited in REDEMPTIVE PLAN should be
sufficient proof that Biblical dates do produce correct answers.
Moreover, when those dates are viewed prophetically in COMING
GLORY, they show the Bible to be both internally consistent and
capable of identifying and relating with precise accuracy, the
prophetic nature of major events that have occurred even in the
20th century. Therefore, interpretations by archaeologists who
advance views that the Bible is mythological or irrelevant cannot
be accepted, for such views are proved incorrect by scholarship
available from other disciplines independent of archaeology.
Hence, it becomes necessary to distinguish the evidence that
comes from Biblical Archaeology from certain archaeologists who
offer untested or extraneous interpretations of that evidence.
Thus, ERETZ ISRAEL will not discount the evidence, but will
suggest ways of evaluating it so as to be in harmony with the
Bible.
Accordingly, if
Biblical Archaeology is to continue to have practical meaning for
those interested in the Bible but not acquainted with the
intricacies of that science, a step back from the detailed
interpretations of data at individual sites needs to be taken, to
determine whether they contribute to the fund of knowledge
already assembled from Biblical Archaeology as a whole, as well
as that available from other disciplines. In essence, it becomes
important to be guided by an overall "model" for
Biblical Archaeology which should be both the recipient of new
evidence, but also the reference for comparison and testing of
new interpretations of that evidence. By the way, such models are
routinely devised for other scientific endeavors, so archaeology
should be no exception.
One such
"model", if it can be called that, has evolved within
Biblical Archaeology over the last fifty or so years.
Unfortunately, the archaeological timeline that it produces has
grown increasingly conflict with the evidence obtained at a large
number of digs in and around Israel in recent years. This has
prompted a revised "model" and timeline that appeared
in a paper in the Biblical Archaeological Review,
September/October 1987, titled "Redating The Exodus".
That paper actually went far beyond the issue of the Exodus, for
it considered many of the major "tels" in Israel where
archaeological results were available at that time. Though some
problems may still remain with this revision, it appears to
achieve correlation with site analyses far better than the
Generally Accepted Dates (GAD), i.e. timeline, derived from the
earlier one. This "Revised Timeline" is therefore the
one that is used in ERETZ ISRAEL.
If you would like to
study this issue in more detail, just go to,
"TIMELINES FOR BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY"
The Old Testament
portion of ERETZ ISRAEL is divided into seven
"Sessions", essentially beginning with Abraham. Since
it covers a time period of about 1500 years, it cannot deal with
all the details, but will try at least to highlight the more
significant features of Israel's history and their relation with
God during that long span of time.
The period of the
Patriarchs is described in the book of Genesis and covers
thousands of years. However, our more detailed knowledge of Bible
times really begins a little over 2000 BC, around the time of
Abram (later Abraham) who became the progenitor of Israel.
Therefore, it is with Abraham that ERETZ ISRAEL begins. We see
this pagan Gentile given promises by God and told to travel to a
Land he had never seen. His journey by faith to the Land of
Canaan has become an example of the kind of faith that pleases
God. Issac, his son of the promise, then his grandson Jacob, were
both born and raised in this Land of promise, but in Jacob's
later years, a series of circumstances involving one of his sons
by the name of Joseph caused he and his whole clan to move to
Egypt. Though the early years were good, the final ones of that
430 year stay were under the harsh yoke of an Egyptian Pharaoh
who enacted a policy of genecide against the Hebrew male
children.
It was during this time
that Moses was born. His story as both the "deliverer"
and "lawgiver" of the Hebrew people, is perhaps one of
the most familiar in all the Bible. Israel's Exodus from Egyptian
slavery by the mighty hand of God is indeed a moving story.
Unfortunately, its conclusion is sadly tempered by Israel's
subsequent refusal to enter the Promised Land of their
inheritance when given the opportunity, thereby forcing them to
continue wandering in the Sinai wilderness for a period of 40
years.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- An introduction to
the patriarchal period from Noah to Abram.
- The story of
Abram's birth, early life, and sojourn in the Land of
promise, with pictures and maps showing where he
traveled, lived, and was tested when the Lord commanded
him to offer his son Issac for a sacrifice.
- Jacob and his clan
in Egypt as archaeology is able to shed some light on
when and where they lived, and the conditions of their
slavery just before the Exodus.
- The birth and
early life of Moses, who after being raised in the palace
of the Pharaoh with privilege and power, rejected worldly
fame and was used by God to deliver his people from their
slavery through a series of plagues vented upon Egypt.
- The region of the
Sinai Wilderness where the Hebrews made their Exodus out
of Egypt, received God's Covenant of Law, then made their
trek to the southern border of the promised Land under
the leadership of Moses.
- God's offer to
Israel of their inheritance, but their tragic decision to
spurn it, forcing them to wander 40 years in the
wilderness.

(18 FRAMES
@VIEWING TIME OF 40-50 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK ON THE FIRST SLIDE)
Understanding Bible
times requires an appreciation of the geography of the Land, and
the geo-political situation created by neighboring Gentile powers
before and during Israel's time in the Land. This Session serves
as an interlude in the historical account to provide such an
overview.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- A summary of the
geology, communication routes, climate, ancient economy,
and housing in the Land during Old Testament times.
- The identification
and influence of the peoples who lived in and around the
Land prior to Israel's occupation.
- The concept of the
"Land Between" as a land bridge between
international powers to the South and North, showing the
interplay between Israel and those various Gentile powers
throughout their history.
- An illustration
taken from ancient records of a military campaign into
Canaan by one of the Egyptian Pharaohs just prior to
Israel's entrance into the Land.

(8 FRAMES @VIEWING TIME OF
20-25 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK ON THE FIRST SLIDE)
The book of Joshua
describes the occupation of the Land as a military conquest. It
is an exciting and fast moving account of a succession of
military campaigns that led to Israel's decisive victory over the
Gentile inhabitants of Canaan. However, the Biblical scenario for
both the Exodus and subsequent entrance into the Land has come
under sharp attack by a growing number of archaeologists who
minimize the Biblical story as simply mythological or
traditional. This requires that the grounds for these alternative
renditions be identified and then countered by the use of the
"Revised Timeline" for Biblical Archaeology.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- A review of the
historical setting in the wilderness region to the South
of the Land that forced Israel to make a circuitous route
to enter the Land from the East .
- Scenes in the
Gilead east of the Land, and Israel's preparations just
prior to the crossing of the River Jordan.
- The crossing of
the River Jordan with descriptions of the region where
the crossing occurred and a possible explanation for this
"miracle" in light of recorded history.
- The importance of
ancient and modern Jericho with maps and pictures, and
its destruction related to archaeological finds and the
unique geology of the region.
- Joshua's military
tactics and strategy through the entire campaign from
Jericho to Ai, then against the five Amorite kings in the
South, emphasizing the ancient and modern-day military
significance of the "Bethel Plateau" and
"Central Benjamin Plateau".
- Archaeological
finds, correlated with statements in the Bible,
concerning those cities destroyed or occupied by the
Hebrews.
- A possible
connection between archaeological finds pertaining to the
"Amarna Age", and Israel's military strategy
for the taking of the Land.
- The final battle
for the north country centered about the city of Hazor,
and results of that campaign.

(20 FRAMES @VIEWING TIME
OF 50-60 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK ON THE FIRST SLIDE)
A long period of almost
360 years followed Israel's initial occupation of the Land before
the arrival of Israel's kingdom. Following a brief period of
territorial allocation among the twelve Tribes, the book of
Judges defines the bulk of that period. It describes repeated
times of apostasy among the Tribes as they fraternized with the
Gentile inhabitants of the Land, but also depicts notable acts of
heroism as certain Israelites and Tribes rose to prominence as
defenders against various Gentile threats.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- A detailed review
of the way the Land was allocated to the twelve Tribes in
its relation to both internal and international Gentile
threats.
- A recounting of
four historic events during the period of the Judges.
- The civil war
with Benjamin.
- The story of
Deborah and Barak.
- Gideon's
defense against the Midianites in the Jezreel Valley.
- The Tribe of
Dan's move to the north and Samson's escapades
against the Philistines.
- The pattern of
apostasy during the times of the Judges.

(17
FRAMES @VIEWING TIME OF 40-50 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK ON THE FIRST SLIDE)
In the closing days of
Samuel, the last judge, Israel's form of government gave way to a
kingdom, much like those of the surrounding Gentile nations. The
kingdom began with Saul during a time of great trouble with the
Philistines. Then a young upstart by the name of David was chosen
by God, and anointed by Samuel to be the next king. After years
of intense conflict with jealous Saul ending with his death at
the hands of the Philistines, David became the second king.
following more years of Tribal division, David was able to
consolidate his position, becoming king over all Israel from
Jerusalem, its new capital. Then following a brief co-regency
near the end of David's reign, his son Solomon became successor
to the throne. During the reigns of David and Solomon, ancient
Israel reached her glory, becoming a center of power, both feared
and respected by nations over the entire Middle East.
Unfortunately, Solomon's riches and glory caused him to turn away
from the Lord, and with his death, this brief 116 year period
constituting the United Kingdom, came to an abrupt end.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- Samuel's legacy as
a founder of ancient Israel's kingdom.
- The destruction of
Shiloh & taking of the Ark by the Philistines
- The years of king
Saul's reign and military campaigns.
- David's anointing
as the next king and rise to fame by his victory over
Goliath, then his exile as he fled from Saul's insane
jealousy into the Judean wilderness.
- The occasion and
circumstances of Saul's ignoble death in the Jezreel
Valley.
- David's rise as
the greatest king in Israel's history, chronicled by
showing both his political and military prowess in the
taking of the Jebusite city to become Jerusalem.
- David's great sin
with Bathsheba and his resulting decline.
- Solomon's building
of the Temple, the glory of his reign, and his decline.

(15 FRAMES @VIEWING TIME
OF 35-40 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK ON THE FIRST SLIDE)
Following the death of
king Solomon, the ten Tribes to the north broke off to form the
kingdom of Israel, with Judah, Simeon, and part of Benjamin
continuing as the kingdom of Judah to the South. Thus began a
period of slightly over 200 years while the two factions remained
inexorably split. After the destruction of Israel by the
Assyrians in 723 BC, the southern kingdom of Judah remained in
the Land until 586 BC when it too was destroyed by the
Babylonians, thus ending Israel's ancient kingdom.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- A discussion of
the period of disruption from inter-tribal, spiritual,
and international perspectives.
- The rise of Aram
to the north and its impact on the two kingdoms.
- Apostasy in the
northern kingdom under Ahab, and his confrontation with
the prophet Elijah.
- The rise of the
Assyrian empire, and events leading up to the destruction
of the northern kingdom of Israel.
- Assyria's attack
on the southern kingdom of Judah at the time of Hezekiah.
- Places of cultish
worship by the Israelites during the Divided Kingdom, and
the roles of the prophets.
- The end of
Israel's ancient kingdom at the hands of the Babylonians.

(11 FRAMES @VIEWING TIME
OF 25-30 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK ON THE FIRST SLIDE)
God's Covenant with
Israel rested upon the people, the Law, the Tabernacle, and the
Land of their inheritance. Among those, the Tabernacle is a
fascinating subject because it expressed a unique privilege for
fellowship with God, but having prophetic implications not
fulfilled until New Testament times.
Though the prophets
were not prominent initially, Israel's continual violations of
the Covenant caused their role to increase over time. During the
latter phases of Israel's kingdom, the Lord used prophets, first
to admonish and correct, then predict the ultimate consequences
of Israel's violations. The prophets were used by the Lord to
provide a unique provision for His people to complement the
written decrees of the Law, but their prophecies also reveal
amazing insights concerning events, many of which have already
been fulfilled in New Testament times, and others which are still
future to us in the 20th century!
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- A review of the
giving of the Covenant at Mount Sinai, and construction
of the wilderness Tabernacle.
- The Tabernacle
pictured and studied by proceeding step by step through
the "Outer Courtyard", "Holy Place",
and finally into the "Holy of Holies", where
only the High Priest was permitted on the Day of
Atonement.
- The prophetic
implications of the Tabernacle as an Old Testament
"picture" of the New Testament Covenant.
- The role and rise
of the school of the prophets at the time of Samuel.
- Several examples
of the prophets' ministry, including the prophet Joel's
prediction of the date on which the New Testament
Covenant would be given.

(12 FRAMES @VIEWING TIME
OF 30-35 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK ON THE FIRST SLIDE)
The New Testament
portion of ERETZ ISRAEL is divided into four
"Sessions". The first Session focuses on Jesus' Life
& Ministry, but also sets the stage for the dramatic changes
that occurred in Israel between Old and New Testament times. The
remaining Sessions look both at the religious upheaval within the
Land following Messiah's coming, and Israel's mounting problems
with their Roman oppressors, eventually leading up to a terrible
war and utter destruction.
Jesus was born at a
time long after Israel's glory had departed, with the nation
under the heavy heel of the Roman empire. A period of nearly 400
years had transpired since the time of the prophet Malachi in the
Old Testament, and new Jewish leadership from sects like the
Pharisees and Sadducees had emerged. Herod, though not a Jew, had
parlayed himself to become king over the region at the bequest of
the Romans. It was in such a setting that Jesus the Messiah was
born in Bethlehem of Judea, at the appointed time in fulfillment
of Old Testament prophecy. Much of His subsequent life and
ministry took place in Galilee, and scenes in and around that
area where He preached and performed miracles have continued to
inspire His followers to this very day.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- Intertestament
backgrounds on the genesis of the synagogue during or
following the Babylonian Exile, and the subsequent
influence of Hellenization on the Jews.
- The arrival of the
"magi", and Herod's reaction.
- Jesus' early life
with scenes ancient and modern in and around the city of
Nazareth.
- Jesus' baptism in
the River Jordan, and temptation in the Judean
wilderness.
- A review of the
history and geography of the Land at the time of Jesus.
- Jesus' ministry at
first in Nazareth, then in Capernaum and around the Sea
of Galilee.
- Scenes in Galilee
where Jesus spoke and performed miracles.
- Jesus near the
close of His Galilean ministry atop the Mount of
Transfiguration with Peter, James, and John.

(24 FRAMES @VIEWING TIME
OF 50-60 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK ON THE FIRST SLIDE)
After Jesus completed
His ministry in Galilee, He began the final journey south through
Jericho, then up to Jerusalem where He would be crucified.
Following a brief stay at the house of His friends, Lazarus,
Martha, and Mary, He made a triumphal entrance into Jerusalem as
King, on the day that has come to be known as "Palm
Sunday". During the following week, repeated confrontations
with Jewish leadership made it apparent that those previous
Sunday acclamations by the multitude would be short lived. He and
His disciples held their final Passover supper together in a room
on Mount Zion, then departed across the Kidron Valley to the
Mount of Olives.
The rest of the story
is familiar to millions as He was arrested there, interrogated,
judged by Pontius Pilate, and summarily crucified. Though many
thousands of convicted souls were undoubtedly crucified unjustly
during the times of the Roman empire, only One in all the history
of mankind is recorded to have been resurrected back to life in a
glorified body. Unquestionably, it is this epochal event recorded
in the New Testament that has served to define Christianity, for
it is not built on the religion a dead martyr, but on the promise
of a personal relationship with the One who now lives and is
ascended into Heaven. That record of Jesus Christ's resurrection
as the glorified Messiah makes it imperative that we retrace
those last seven days, so that we too might make our decision for
or against Him.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- Jesus' journey to
Jerusalem.
- His triumphal
entrance into Jerusalem as King on Palm Sunday.
- Scenes in and
around the Temple during the following week.
- A night of prayer
at Gethsemane.
- Jesus' arrest,
interrogation, and judgement.

(13
FRAMES @VIEWING TIME OF 30-35 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK OF THE FIRST SLIDE)
The disciples'
unremitting grief at Messiah's crucifixion was instantly replaced
by inexpressible joy upon seeing Him again alive. The book of
Acts records His ascention back to the Father, after confirming
the truth of His resurrection over a period of 40 days. They had
been told to remain in Jerusalem to await the coming of the Holy
Spirit. When that transpired just 10 days later on Pentecost,
many accepted this new "Way" and were baptized. However
Jewish leadership remained adamantly opposed and launched a
program of persecution again the Lord's disciples. This finally
came to a climax when a disciple by the name of Stephen
confronted an enraged Jewish Sanhedrin and was stoned to death.
As the disciples were forced to flee Jerusalem, the message of
the resurrected Messiah spread to the Gentiles. However it was
Saul (later Paul), a Pharisee and undoubtedly the chief
instigator of Stephen's death, who surprisingly became the chief
spokesman to the Gentiles in behalf of Christianity . In the
years following his conversion on a road between Jerusalem and
Damascus, he conducted missionary journeys throughout the Roman
world. Though his commission came to an end at the hands of the
Roman emperor Nero, his timeless letters defining the true
meaning of Christianity constitute almost half of the New
Testament, and have been treasured by literally hundreds of
millions of people through the centuries.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- The general area
of Jesus' ascention back to Heaven.
- Pentecost and the
beginning of the Church.
- The
"Way" is opened to the Gentiles.
- Paul's missionary
journeys.
- The end of Paul's
ministry.

(10
FRAMES @VIEWING TIME OF 25-30 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK OF THE FIRST SLIDE)
In AD 66 a rebellion
broke out by the Jews against Roman injustices against them. It
began in the coastal and northern areas of Israel, but ended at
Jerusalem itself. After one failed attempt to enter Jerusalem by
the Syrian general Cestius, the Romans mounted concerted efforts,
first under Vespasian, then his son Titus. The Coup de Grace
occured when Titus laid siege to Jerusalem in AD 70, bringing
about its destruction in the fall of that year. The walls were
breached, the Temple destroyed, and most of the inhabitants of
the city put to the sword. A few zealots managed to escape to
continue their defiance from a stronghold near the Dead Sea
called Masada, but with the fall of that fortress in AD 73, the
ancient nation of Israel essentially ceased to exist. Thus ended
the 2000 year story of Israel's Biblical history, and our story
in ERETZ ISRAEL.
SESSION TOPICS ARE:
- The accounting of
events leading up to Jerusalem's destruction.
- Scenes of
Jerusalem's first century destruction.
- Masada's
history.
- Masada's
facilities and fortifications.
- The Roman
campaign against Masada.
- The fall of
Masada.
- Israel's tragic
demise but her COMING GLORY!

(7
FRAMES @VIEWING TIME OF 15-20 MINUTES)
(FOR AUDIO JUST CLICK OF THE FIRST SLIDE)