GOD'S
REDEMPTIVE PLAN
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See how its structured here topically or
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Be able to date Bible events and understand its
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THE BIBLE (TOPICAL) |
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| THE BIBLE (CHRONOLOGICAL) |
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| HOMEPAGE |
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| THE OLD TESTAMENT
(TOPICAL) |
| <---------------HISTORY---------------> |
WRITINGS |
<--------------PROPHETS--------------> |
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| Genesis |
Exodus |
Joshua |
Job |
Isaiah |
Jeremiah |
Hosea |
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Leviticus |
Judges |
Psalms |
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Lamentations |
Joel |
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Numbers |
Ruth |
Proverbs |
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Ezekiel |
Amos |
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Deuteronomy |
I Samuel |
Song of
Songs |
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Daniel |
Obadiah |
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II
Samuel |
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Jonah |
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I Kings |
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Micah |
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II Kings |
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Nahum |
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I
Chronicles |
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Habakkuk |
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II
Chronicles |
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Zephaniah |
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Babylonian Exile |
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Babylonian Exile |
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Ezra |
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Haggai |
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Nehemiah |
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Zechariah |
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Esther |
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Malachi |
ORGANIZATION
OLD TESTAMENT (TOPICAL) |
The Old
Testament is first organized into the following three major
sections without altering in any way the order in which the books
already appear in the Christian Old Testament Bible.
"Historical"---comprising the first 17
books from "Genesis to Esther"
"Writings"---comprising the center 5
books from "Job to Song of Songs"
"Prophets"---comprising the last 17
books from "Isaiah to Malachi"
Entire
books within these major sections are then further grouped
together according to the commonality of subjects found to be
contained in them. Once again, this is done without altering in
any way the order in which the books already appear in the
Christian Old Testament Bible.
Each book
in the Old Testament is reviewed and outlined according to its
content. This step will provide you a cursory review of the
entire Old Testament if you are not already entirely familiar
with it, and additionally will allow you to check the rationale
for the above topical sub-groupings.
The present division
of Old Testament books and their particular placement in the Old
Testament Bible is certainly not the only one used throughout
history. The present day Jewish version of the Old Testament
places the books of the prophets, i.e. Isaiah -- Malachi,
immediately after II Kings. In addition, the books of
Lamentations, Ecclesiates, Esther, Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, I
Chronicles, and II Chronicles are placed at the end of the Old
Testament. Furthermore, early versions of both the Jewish and
Christian Old Testaments grouped the topics together to form only
21 books instead of the present 39.
However, notice
that this particular arrangement creates a certain symmetry with
respect to the "WRITINGS" that fall at the center of the
Old Testament, and that each grouping does discuss a topic
distinctly different from the ones before or after. As
this study continues here and in that part of Olive Tree Studies
titled Coming Glory, it will become clear the this organization
seems to be the one that makes God's Redemptive Plan stand out
most clearly.
In order to see the
distinctive nature of this arrangement, you may review each of
these three major groupings.
| THE NEW TESTAMENT
(TOPICAL) |
<---GOSPELS--> |
<---HISTORY---> |
CHURCH
<---------------LETTERS--------------> |
HEBREW
<---LETTERS---> |
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| Matthew |
Acts |
Romans |
I Timothy |
Hebrews |
| Mark |
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I Corinthians |
II Timothy |
James |
| Luke |
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II Corinthians |
Titus |
I Peter |
| John |
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Galatians |
Philemon |
II Peter |
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Ephesians |
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I John |
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Philippians |
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II John |
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Colossians |
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III John |
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I Thessalonians |
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Jude |
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II Thessalonians |
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Revelation |
ORGANIZATION
NEW TESTAMENT (TOPICAL) |
The New
Testament is first organized into the following four major
sections without altering in any way the order in which the books
already appear in the Christian New Testament Bible.
"Gospels"---comprising the first 4 books
from Matthew to John
"History"---the following book of
Acts
"Church
Letters"---comprising
the next 13 books in the New Testament from Romans to
Philemon
"Hebrew Letters"---comprising the last 9 books
in the New Testament from Hebrews to Revelation
Entire
books within the last two major sections are then further
organized as appropriate into topical sub-groupings according to
the commonality of subjects found to be contained in them. Once
again, this is done without altering in any way the order in
which the books already appear in the Christian New Testament
Bible.
Just as
with the Old Testament, all of the New Testament books are
summarized and outlined separately for content and
correspondence.
In order to see the
distinctive nature of this arrangement, you may review each of
these four major groupings.
| THE OLD TESTAMENT
(CHRONOLOGICAL) |
| PATRIARCH |
EGYPT
SOJOURN |
EXODUS |
TRIBAL
PERIOD |
UNITED
KINGDOM |
DIVIDED
KINGDOM |
POST
KINGDOM |
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For the purpose of
studying Old Testament chronology, it will be divided into the
seven segments shown above. It will be possible to assign
specific dates and time periods to each of these segments,
however to understand the way in which this is done will require
that the segments must be studied in a particular order.
The Old Testament of
the Bible is not an easy book to understand and it is made even
more difficult by it's near absence of dates and time periods
connecting many of the more important events. Those few events
that are dated may be specified as a month or day in a Levitical
calendar or according to the year of the reign of some ancient
king, but never in a way that permits easy association with our
modern-day calendar. Thus we are left guessing as to the time the
event occurred or as to the elapsed time between it and some
other important event.
A Calendar would be
a great asset to Bible study, however several questions are
frequently posed concerning the reliability of such a result.
- Is the Old
Testament accurate when it specifies times when things
occurred?
- Was the length
of a year then the same as it is now?
The Old Testament matter-of-factly records the ages of
some of the men in ancient times to be hundreds of years!
Such life spans are incredible to our thinking and cause
people to question not only its veracity but the length
of a year in ancient times.
- Is it possible
to reconcile time periods within the Old Testament,
specifically in the books of the Kings and Chronicles?
A close scrutiny of certain Bible texts will reveal that
some of the numbers dont add up. In particular, the
Old Testament books of the Kings and Chronicles give the
reigns of the kings of Israel, but when the time spans
within the books are compared or when the totals are
added up they dont always check out. Consequently,
many people along with some Bible historians have
concluded that Bible accuracy is suspect and precise
dating impossible.
- How accurate
were the ancient calendars used by Israel and the
surrounding Gentile nations?
Ancient peoples did not have the methods of modern
astronomy and many thought that the earth was flat and at
the center of the universe. Moreover, there was no
unified calendar in use within different regions of the
world.
- How could
ancient calendars be meaningful today, since those people
usually related events to the reigns of contemporary
kings?
This fact would require the recovery of the reigning
dates for such kings.
- Even if ancient
"calendars" existed, have they been preserved
physically in a form that can be studied and understood?
Certainly we should not expect ancient records to predate
the time of the flood during the days of Noah, but even
Abraham lived over 4000 years ago, king David reigned
3000 years ago, and the Old Testament was completed about
400 years before the birth of Jesus Christ.
With such formidable
obstacles as these, the construction of a reliable Calendar for
the Bible seems highly unlikely. Yet such Calendars have been
developed, typically to an accuracy of one year and sometimes to
a specific date within a year! The ways that this has been done
should be of interest to those who seek greater assurance that
the Bible is truly the Word of God, and for those who want to
relate it to secular history.
A Bible historian by
the name of Edwin R. Thiele began to deal with these fundamental
questions over 50 years ago. In the "Journal of Near Eastern
Studies" (1944), he submitted an article titled "The
Chronology of the Kings of Judah and Israel". That work
continued until his most recent book titled "The Mysterious
Numbers Of The Hebrew Kings" first published in 1983. His
research has become widely accepted and he is today possibly the
foremost authority on the subject of dating the Old Testament
kings of Israel. His studies now serve to provide some rather
convincing answers to the above questions. Here are some of his
findings.
- It is now a
fact that the science of archaeology has enabled the
recovery of large quantities of material pertaining to
the cultures of ancient Near East civilizations, and that
some of this written material was precisely dated at the
time of its writing.
- It can now be
certified that the ancients were not as ignorant in
matters of astronomy as we might believe. Surprisingly,
they were well aware of conjunctions of the sun and moon.
The reigns of certain Gentile kings of the ancient Near
East back to the time of the Assyrian Empire in the ninth
Century BC were associated with those astronomical
events. Consequently, it is possible with modern-day
astronomy to simply "turn the clock back" and
recover dates with respect to our present calendar easily
accurate to within one year. In fact it is this very
ability that enables historians and archaeologists to
specify precise dates for those ancient Gentile kings.
- There are
several events described in the Bible that happen to be
related to those Gentile kings, so Biblical dates also
accurate to within one year may be set for those cases.
- Although the
ability to set a date for a single event does not prove
that the Bible is actually correct, when many such events
are correlated over the entire span of Old Testament
history, it is found to produce a result that is highly
credible.
ORGANIZATION
OLD TESTAMENT (CHRONOLOGICAL) |
| THE DIVIDED
KINGDOM PERIOD |
Edwin Thiele's
extensive work to determine the reigns of the kings of Israel
during the period of the the Divided Kingdom becomes the natural
starting point in constructing calendars for the Old Testament.
Here are the steps used to develop a chronology for the Divided
Kingdom Period.
- Edwin Thiele
was able initially to tie two recorded events in the Old
Testament to specific dates recorded in eponyms of the
ancient Assyrian empire. One was the death of Israel's
king Ahab in the sixth year of Assyrian king Shalmaneser
III, and the other was the payment of tribute 12 years
later to that same Assyrian king by Israel's king Jehu.
- Using the two
dated events associated with Ahab and Jehu, Edwin Thiele
was then able work forward and backward through the
entire period of the Divided Kingdom, determining dates
for the reigns of all of the kings. These results were
verified by cross-checking them against several other
events in which the Assyrians and Babylonians had
dealings with Israel that were also recorded with
astronomical precision.
- By this means,
the reigns of all the kings in both the northern kingdom
of Israel and the southern kingdom of Judah were
specified, and the entire Divided Kingdom was found to
span a period from 931/30 BC to 586 BC.
| DATES PRIOR TO
THE DIVIDED KINGDOM |
It will probably be
agreed that the most interesting reading in the Old Testament is
found in those times prior to the period of the Divided Kingdom.
Those were the times when colorful personalities like Abraham,
Moses, Joshua, Gideon, Samson, Samuel, David, and Solomon lived.
Many of the spiritual foundations of Gods dealings with
mankind are best illustrated by their lives and the situations
they confronted. Consequently, it is crucial that their lives and
stories be connected in time, so that we might fully appreciate
the flow of history through those Bible times.
Unfortunately a
special problem exists prior to the period of the Divided
Kingdom. Archaeology has produced a wealth of material from those
earlier times, but precise
chronological synchronism between Biblical events and
contemporary Gentile records are rare. For example, the people
mentioned above who are famous in the Bible are not mentioned in
any of the Gentile records. Nor is this particularly surprising
since only Moses, who grew up in Egypt, and Solomon, who reigned
over Israel at the height of its glory, would likely have had
extensive dealings with the major Gentile powers of their times.
For these reasons,
it is necessary to construct the chronology before the period of
the Divided Kingdom from the Bible itself, without the benefit of
direct corollary secular dating. A way to accomplish this is by
extrapolating back from the 931/30 BC start of the Divided
Kingdom, using the time intervals specified in the Bible that
happen to connect the Divided Kingdom period with earlier ones.
Of course, those holding to a belief of Bible inerrancy will
probably find this perfectly acceptable, but others might regard
the results as suspect.
Were the Bible
simply a history book, there would probably be no satisfactory
solution to the problem. However, we are benefited by the way the
Bible interconnects historic events with both spiritual and
prophetic principles. By using some unique connections between
Biblical chronology, the historical record, and Bible prophecy,
it will be demonstrated in Coming Glory, the prophetic section of
Olive Tree Studies, why chronology constructed from the Bible
itself not only produces internal Bible consistency, but ultimate
agreement with the historical record when the results are first
projected into New Testament times and then into the 20th
century.
| DATING
POST-KINGDOM TIMES |
This time period is by
far the easiest to reconstruct for two reasons.
- Since Israel's
kingdom no longer existed, there are no complications
stemming from overlapping coregencies between the two
competing kingdoms within Israel, differences in the
calendars used between the kingdoms, and even different
methods for counting the initial year of a reigning king.
- There are numerous
secular dates provided by eponyms from the Medo-Persian
empire that may be related to specific events described
in the Bible books related to those Post-Kingdom times.
| STUDYING OLD TESTAMENT
CHRONOLOGY |
There are two ways you
may approach this study of Old Testament chronology.
- If you are
primarily interested in WHAT the dates and times were for
people and events, simply pick the relevant time period
below and go directly to it. You will find a calendar in
each of the periods highlighting key people and events.
- If you are also
interested in HOW the calendars are related to one
another, and the underlying assumptions required to tie
them together, the chronology of the Old Testament will
be more understandable by studying the time periods in
the specific numerical order given below.
| THE NEW TESTAMENT
(CHRONOLOGICAL) |
INTERTESTAMENT
<----------PERIOD----------> |
JESUS' LIFE &
<--------MINISTRY---------> |
APOSTOLIC
<---------- PERIOD---------> |
WAR |
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For the purpose of
studying New Testament chronology, it will be divided into the
four segments shown above. It is possible to assign specific
dates and time periods to each of these segments in the following
way.
- Statements taken
directly from New Testament texts that reference events
in secular history are used to construct a set of
calendars from the birth of Jesus Christ through most of
the Apostolic period.
- Dated events
including the destruction of Jerusalem and taking of
Masada are then added to the above Biblical history from
the records of early historians.
We do not usually
think of the New Testament as an historical document, since it is
revered for its spiritual truths that can be life changing if
heeded. Nevertheless, its pages contain many references to
individuals and events also mentioned in secular history. This
fact enables us to connect the entire New Testament with known
history from other sources. In so doing, it is possible to more
fully understand the culture and circumstances of that time for
richer meaning.
However, the
greatest value of such an effort lies in a unique characteristic
of the Bible not discerned at first glance. The Bible is
primarily God's Redemptive Plan and not a history book, so those
historical features it does contain are often subtly slanted
toward Gods perspective on the matter. Unfortunately, this
view is not often studied or even realized in Bible study, so it
will be the chief purpose here and in Coming Glory, the prophetic
portion of Olive Tree Studies, to highlight that perspective. It
is hoped that the significance of such an emphasis will become
appreciated as you review this material.
| STUDYING NEW TESTAMENT
CHRONOLOGY |
There are two ways you
may approach this study of New Testament chronology.
- If you are
primarily interested in WHAT the dates and times were for
people and events, simply pick the relevant time period
below and go directly to it. You will find a calendar in
each of the periods highlighting the key people and
events.
- If you are also
interested in HOW the calendars are related to one
another, and the underlying assumptions required to tie
them together, the chronology of the New Testament will
read more easily by studying the time periods in the
specific numerical order given below. This also happens
to be the chronological order of events as they actually
occurred.