Difference between revisions of "Bible history"

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Bible history is simply history from the vantage point of the Bible. More specifically, it is history from the vantage point of God. "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth..." (Genesis 1:1).  
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{{Bible}}
 +
Unlike many other "holy" books, the [[Bible]] contains tremendous verifiable history (see: [[Biblical archaeology]] and [[Christian apologetics websites#Historical and legal apologetics|Christian historical apologetics]]). This '''Bible history''' begins with the creation of the "heavens and the Earth" (''i.e.'', everything) and concludes with [[Saint Paul|Paul's]] missionary journeys around AD 50.
  
Bible history can be segmented into three periods:
+
From the beginning to the incident at the [[Tower of Babel]] in the [[Book of Genesis]], this is effectively a history of the world. It includes history about the ancient [[Hebrew]] people. The [[New Testament]] has the history of the beginnings of [[Christianity]].
  
1) The Patriarch period. This would span the time of Adam until Moses (Genesis 1 - Exodus 19). The Patriarch period can be subdivided even further. a) Adam through Terah (Abraham's father). Genesis 1-11.  This would cover a period of time equal to about 2,500 years. b) Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Joseph:  Genesis 12 - 50. This would cover a period of time than 5oo years. c) Israel in Egyptian slavery through two-thirds of Moses life: Exodus 1 - 19. This would cover a period of time equal to about 80 years.
+
== Chronology ==
 
+
{{Main|Biblical chronology|Biblical chronology dispute}}
2) The Mosaic period. This would span the time of Moses until the death of Christ (Exodus 20 - John 21). The Mosaic period is the period of time in which the Law of Moses (Exodus 21 - Deuteronomy), as a codified law, was in force and directed a people of Israel. The law specifically applied to the Isrealite people. Non-Israelites were not amenable to the Law's instruction. This period of time coverd about 1,450 years. The Mosaic time period is rich with both God's blessings upon the people and His judgment against them. The historical narrative books of this time period would be Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1 & 2 Samuel, 1 & 2 Kings, 1 & 2 Chronicles, Exra, Nehemiah, and Esther. About 1000 years are covered in these books. Joshua was Moses' servant. When Moses died, the Lord identified Joshua as his replacement.
+
  
After Moses death, Joshua became Israel's leader and prosecuted war against the inhabitants of Canaan. Those who dwelt in Canaan were idolators and some of that worship consisted of human sacrifices. In this prosecution, there was corruption. The Lord told them to drive out the inhabitants of Canaan, but they did not (cf. Joshua 17:13). This turned out to be a continual thorn in Israel's side. The period of the Judges was a period of time when Israel had no single leader, but judges who were also prophets. Some notable judges would be Gideon (Judges 6-8), Samson (Judges 13-16), Eli and Samuel (1 Samuel 1-9). The High Priest under the Law of Moses would be the closest single representative of God. Apart from him, Samuel might be the most well known and respected judge.  
+
The Bible contains a number of chronogenealogies (primarily in [[Genesis, Chapter 5|Genesis 5]] and [[Genesis, Chapter 11|11]]) and other references to periods of time which can be used in many cases to determine how much time elapsed between two events.
  
In the period of Samuel, Kings, and the Chronicles, kings reigned. Three noteworthy kings in Israel's history would be Saul, David, and Solomon. King Saul was Israel's first God ordained king. Saul, however, was not loyal to God (1 Samuel 15). Consequently, the Lord chose a man "after his own heart" (I Samuel 13), that man was David. David was a young man when the Lord gave him the throne (30 years of age) and he reigned 40 years (1 Kings 2:11). Solomon, David's son, reigned in his place and he, too, reigned 40 years (1 Kings 11:42). It was under the reign of Solomon that the Lord said the kingdom of Israel would be split into two unequal (in size) parts (1 Kings 11:11, 31). At this point in Israel's division there was Judah (also known as the southern kingdom) and Israel (also known as the northern kingdom). Israel did not have any loyalty to the Lord. Israel's first king (also known as Jeroboam I) was motivated by fear to establish a false religion of idolatry (1 Kings 12). Each king after him perpetuated this idolatry. Ultimately, the Lord had enough of this and sent them into Assyrian captivity (2 Kings 17). Some of the notable kings in Israel's history would be Jeroboam (1 Kings 12-14), Omri (1 Kings 16), Ahab (1 Kings 16-22), and Jehu (2 Kings 9-10). Judah, on the other hand, was a confused kingdom. There was loyatly to the Lord, but not by every king. Because of their confusion in who to serve, the Lord sent them into Babylonian captivity (2 Kings 24-25). This was for a period of 70 years (2 Chronicles 36:21). Some notable kings of Judah (from the Lord's perspective) would be: Asa (1 Kings 15), Jehoshaphat (1 Kings 22), Hezekiah (2 Kings 18-20) and Josiah (2 Kings 22-23).  
+
Numerous scholars have derived absolute chronologies based on these, including the famous chronology by Archbishop [[James Ussher]]. This article uses Ussher's dates. "A.M." dates are ''Anno Mundi'', or ''year of the world''.
  
After the period of Babylonian captivity, the Lord's promise to Judah was realized. The books of Ezra records the Persian king's (Cyrus) decree for the people's of the land to repopulate their homelands. For the Jews, about 50,000 went back (Ezra 2).  
+
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''''Year:''''' 1 A.M./4004 B.C.</div>
  
3) The Christian period. This would span the time of the Lord's commission to the apostles (Mark 16:15) until He returns again (1 Corinthians 15:20-29).
+
== Creation ==
 +
{{Main|Creation}}
  
{{stub}}
+
The Bible begins with God creating the "heavens and the Earth", which is a merism for "everything", or in modern terms, the universe.
 +
Creation proceeds over a period of six [[day]]s, culminating with the creation of the first two [[human beings|humans]], [[Adam]] and [[Eve]].
 +
God provides a [[Garden of Eden|garden]] for Adam and Eve, with all its plants being available for food for them, except that he does not allow them to eat from one tree in the centre of the garden, with the punishment being that they will die if they do.
 +
 
 +
However, Adam and Eve do eat from the [[Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil|the tree of knowledge of good and evil]].
 +
As a result, God causes them to begin dying, although it will be 960 years before Adam is dead.  In the beginning, God and His creation of man and woman had perfect spiritual fellowship. Because of sin, that spiritual fellowship was broken immediately, a separation occurred, and death resulted.
 +
 
 +
Adam and Eve have children, and the account includes details of various descendants, including a chronogenealogy for the line leading to [[Abraham]].
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 1656 A.M./2349 B.C. (beginning of flood)</div>
 +
 
 +
== The Flood ==
 +
{{Main|Great Flood}}
 +
 
 +
By about one and a half millennia after creation the population is almost universally wicked, and God decides to destroy most of mankind and give it a fresh start.
 +
There is one righteous man, [[Noah]], so he instructs Noah to build a large boat ([[Noah's Ark|ark]]), and prepare it for pairs of each kind of animal.
 +
 
 +
120 years later, God sends a flood over the whole planet, destroying all air-breathing life except that on the ark, which includes Noah and his three sons and their wives, eight in all.
 +
The flood lasts about one year.
 +
When they disembark, they are told to "fill the Earth".
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 1762 A.M./2242 B.C.</div>
 +
 
 +
== The Tower of Babel ==
 +
{{Main|Tower of Babel}}
 +
 
 +
However, the new population does not fill the Earth, but bands together in one place, and builds a large [[tower]] as a focal point of their new city, defying God in the process.
 +
 
 +
God disperses the group up by causing them to speak different languages.
 +
One of the people in this era was [[Eber]], a great great grandson of Noah.  His name is the source of the term ''Hebrew''.
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 2008 A.M./1996 B.C. (Abraham's birth)</div>
 +
 
 +
== Abraham and Isaac ==
 +
{{Main|Abraham|Isaac}}
 +
 
 +
God calls Abraham, a resident of the city of [[Ur]], to leave his home and go to a new place that God will show him.
 +
God also promises Abraham that he will be the ancestor of nations, and that through him the entire world will be blessed.
 +
 
 +
Abraham does what God instructs, although his faith that God will bless him with an heir is tested, and he has a child by his wife's maid.
 +
However, this son, [[Ishmael]], is not the promised heir, and he later has [[Isaac]] by his wife, [[Sarah]].
 +
(The [[Arab]] nations trace their ancestry back to Ishmael.)
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 2168 A.M./1836 B.C. (Esau's and Jacob's birth)</div>
 +
== Jacob and Joseph ==
 +
{{Main|Jacob|Joseph}}
 +
 
 +
Isaac has two sons, Esau and Jacob.
 +
Jacob is given a new name by God, Israel.
 +
He has twelve sons, and his descendants are collectively known as ''Israelites''.
 +
They make up what was to become the nation of Israel.
 +
 
 +
One of Jacob's sons, Joseph, ends up in [[Egypt]] as the second-in-charge under [[Pharaoh]].
 +
He invites his father and family to live in Egypt.
 +
However, after several generations, the Egyptians grow wary of the Israelites living amongst them, and try to control them by making them slaves and killing all the newborn male children.
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 2433 A.M./1571 B.C. (Moses' birth)</div>
 +
== Moses ==
 +
{{Main|Moses}}
 +
 
 +
One of the children who was supposed to be killed was hidden in a floating basket on the river, where he was found by Pharaoh's daughter, who raised him as her own son.
 +
She named him Moses.
 +
 
 +
When Moses was older, God called Moses to lead the enslaved Israelites out of Egypt, to the land of [[Canaan]], which God had promised to Abraham years earlier.
 +
This journey, which took 40 years because the people disobeyed God, is known as the 'exodus'.
 +
During the exodus, God gave Moses numerous laws for the emerging nation, including the famous [[The Ten Commandments|Ten Commandments]], which God wrote Himself on stone tablets.
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 2553 A.M./1451 B.C. (Israelites enter Canaan)</div>
 +
== Time of the judges ==
 +
{{Main|Judges of Israel|Twelve Tribes of Israel}}
 +
 
 +
The Israelites, in twelve separate tribes mostly corresponding to the twelve sons of Israel, settled in different parts of Canaan.<ref>One tribe, the Levites, were given no land, as they were the priests and were supported by the rest of the population.  However, descendants of Joseph's two sons each made up a separate tribe, so that there were still twelve groups.</ref>
 +
 
 +
There was initially no central [[government]], but from time to time God appointed individuals, known as ''judges'' to lead the people.
 +
However, the Israelites yearned for a [[king]] to rule over them, as surrounding countries had.
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 2909 A.M./1095 B.C. (Saul becomes king)</div>
 +
== The Kings of Israel ==
 +
{{Main|King David|Solomon}}
 +
 
 +
God gave the people what they wanted by appointing [[Saul]] as their king.
 +
During his rein, Israel was challenged by the [[Philistines|Philistine]] army, and in particular by a [[giant]] named [[Goliath]].
 +
The Israelite army was afraid of Goliath, but a shepherd boy, bringing supplies to his older brothers in the army, offered to take on Goliath.
 +
This was [[King David|David]], and he used his sling to knock Goliath unconscious, then beheaded him.
 +
David went on to fight other battles, and eventually succeeded Saul as King.
 +
David also made [[Jerusalem]] the capital of the country.
 +
 
 +
David was succeeded by his son Solomon, and the [[monarchy|kingdom]] enjoyed its greatest prosperity.
 +
Solomon constructed the first [[temple]] in Jerusalem.
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 3029 A.M./975 B.C. (kingdom divided)</div>
 +
== The divided kingdom ==
 +
{{Main|Kingdom of Judah|Northern Kingdom}}
 +
 
 +
After Solomon's death, his two sons divided the kindom in two.
 +
The southern part, comprising the tribes of [[Judah (tribe)|Judah]] and [[Benjamin (tribe)|Benjamin]], became known as ''Judah'', whilst the northern part, comprising the other ten tribes, retained the name ''Israel''.  (It is from the name ''Judah'' that we get the word ''Jew''.<ref>[http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=Jew Online Etymology Dictionary]</ref>)
 +
 
 +
In 721 B.C. Israel was taken by [[Shalmaneser V|Shalmaneser]], with many of the people taken back to [[Babylon]].
 +
The people of the kindom of Israel lost their identity, intermarrying with their conquerors.
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 3416 A.M./588 B.C. (exile begins)</div>
 +
== The exile ==
 +
 
 +
[[Nebuchadnezzar II|Nebuchadnezzar]], king of Babylon, invaded the southern kingdom, Judah, and Jerusalam was taken.
 +
Many of the people were taken to Babylon, but in this case they remained separate and maintained their own identity.
 +
 
 +
In 3468 A.M./537 B.C. the Israelites in Babylon were allowed to return to their country and rebuild Jerusalem.
 +
 
 +
All modern [[Jew]]s trace their ancestry to these members of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin.
 +
People descended from the northern ten tribes, no longer pure Israelites, were treated as outcasts.
 +
This includes those known as [[Samaritan]]s.
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 4000 A.M./5 B.C. (Jesus' birth)</div>
 +
 
 +
== Jesus ==
 +
{{Main|Jesus Christ}}
 +
 
 +
The Bible's history then jumps forward 400 years.
 +
During this time the [[Roman Empire]] conquered the land, and Israel (the former Judah) has become a vassal state of Rome.
 +
 
 +
Jesus is born to [[Mary (mother of Jesus)|Mary]], a resident of the [[Galilee|Galilean]] town of [[Nazareth]], but whilst she and her husband [[Joseph]] are in [[Bethlehem]] for a [[census]].
 +
Joseph and Mary flee to Egypt to escape King [[Herod|Herod's]] [[holy innocents|slaughter of all the young boys of the area]].
 +
They later return to Nazareth, where Jesus grows up, learning [[carpentry]] from his father.
 +
Apart from an incident in the temple in Jerusalem when Jesus was 12, nothing else of his life is recorded in the Bible until he begins his ministry when he is 30 years old.
 +
 
 +
Jesus gathers a following of twelve [[disciple]]s, and travels around Israel teaching, forgiving sin, healing, and performing other miracles.
 +
His implicit and explicit claims to be God and his flouting of the petty rules that have been introduced to the religion make the religious leaders his enemies.
 +
The religions leaders petition [[Pilate]], the governor, to have him arrested and killed.
 +
Pilate reluctantly agrees to their request, and Jesus is executed by the Romans by means of crucifixion.
 +
 
 +
Demonstrating his power over death, Jesus returns to life after being interred in a sealed cave.
 +
He then continues his ministry for a short while, before ascending to heaven.
 +
 
 +
<div style="float:right; padding-top:1em">'''Year:''' 4038 A.M./A.D. 35 (Saul's conversion)</div>
 +
 
 +
== Paul ==
 +
{{Main|Saint Paul}}
 +
 
 +
Saul, also known as Paul, was a Jew with Roman citizenship who was hunting down members of the new sect of followers of Jesus when was dramatically converted (Acts 9:1-19; 22:6-16; 26:14-18).
 +
He subsequently became a leader of the new movement, or at least, the prominent character Luke writres about in his history, the Book of Acts. The followers of the Lord Jesus became known as ''Christians'' (Acts 11:26). He undertook several missionary journeys around the Roman Empire, preaching, debating, and starting churches. Paul's letters to individuals and churches make up much of the [[New Testament]]. He is known to have written Romans, Corinthians (First and Second), Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Thessalonians (First and Second), Timothy (First and Second), and Philemon. Some think that he wrote Hebrews, but the evidence for that is disputed.
 +
 
 +
== External links ==
 +
 
 +
*[http://historicalapologetics.org/ Historical apologetics]
 +
 
 +
== References ==
 +
{{reflist|2}}
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Bible]]

Latest revision as of 13:54, July 5, 2025

800px-Crop Book of Isaiah 2006-06-06.jpg
Bible

Sections
Old Testament
New Testament
Pentateuch
The Gospels

About
History
Canon
Exegesis
Accuracy
Criticism
Inerrancy
Literalism
Chronology
Translations
Hermeneutics

Concepts
Sabbath
Sin
Resurrection
Prophet
The Virgin Birth
Tithe

See also
Christianity

Unlike many other "holy" books, the Bible contains tremendous verifiable history (see: Biblical archaeology and Christian historical apologetics). This Bible history begins with the creation of the "heavens and the Earth" (i.e., everything) and concludes with Paul's missionary journeys around AD 50.

From the beginning to the incident at the Tower of Babel in the Book of Genesis, this is effectively a history of the world. It includes history about the ancient Hebrew people. The New Testament has the history of the beginnings of Christianity.

Chronology

For more detailed treatments, see Biblical chronology and Biblical chronology dispute.

The Bible contains a number of chronogenealogies (primarily in Genesis 5 and 11) and other references to periods of time which can be used in many cases to determine how much time elapsed between two events.

Numerous scholars have derived absolute chronologies based on these, including the famous chronology by Archbishop James Ussher. This article uses Ussher's dates. "A.M." dates are Anno Mundi, or year of the world.

Year: 1 A.M./4004 B.C.

Creation

For a more detailed treatment, see Creation.

The Bible begins with God creating the "heavens and the Earth", which is a merism for "everything", or in modern terms, the universe. Creation proceeds over a period of six days, culminating with the creation of the first two humans, Adam and Eve. God provides a garden for Adam and Eve, with all its plants being available for food for them, except that he does not allow them to eat from one tree in the centre of the garden, with the punishment being that they will die if they do.

However, Adam and Eve do eat from the the tree of knowledge of good and evil. As a result, God causes them to begin dying, although it will be 960 years before Adam is dead. In the beginning, God and His creation of man and woman had perfect spiritual fellowship. Because of sin, that spiritual fellowship was broken immediately, a separation occurred, and death resulted.

Adam and Eve have children, and the account includes details of various descendants, including a chronogenealogy for the line leading to Abraham.

Year: 1656 A.M./2349 B.C. (beginning of flood)

The Flood

For a more detailed treatment, see Great Flood.

By about one and a half millennia after creation the population is almost universally wicked, and God decides to destroy most of mankind and give it a fresh start. There is one righteous man, Noah, so he instructs Noah to build a large boat (ark), and prepare it for pairs of each kind of animal.

120 years later, God sends a flood over the whole planet, destroying all air-breathing life except that on the ark, which includes Noah and his three sons and their wives, eight in all. The flood lasts about one year. When they disembark, they are told to "fill the Earth".

Year: 1762 A.M./2242 B.C.

The Tower of Babel

For a more detailed treatment, see Tower of Babel.

However, the new population does not fill the Earth, but bands together in one place, and builds a large tower as a focal point of their new city, defying God in the process.

God disperses the group up by causing them to speak different languages. One of the people in this era was Eber, a great great grandson of Noah. His name is the source of the term Hebrew.

Year: 2008 A.M./1996 B.C. (Abraham's birth)

Abraham and Isaac

For more detailed treatments, see Abraham and Isaac.

God calls Abraham, a resident of the city of Ur, to leave his home and go to a new place that God will show him. God also promises Abraham that he will be the ancestor of nations, and that through him the entire world will be blessed.

Abraham does what God instructs, although his faith that God will bless him with an heir is tested, and he has a child by his wife's maid. However, this son, Ishmael, is not the promised heir, and he later has Isaac by his wife, Sarah. (The Arab nations trace their ancestry back to Ishmael.)

Year: 2168 A.M./1836 B.C. (Esau's and Jacob's birth)

Jacob and Joseph

For more detailed treatments, see Jacob and Joseph.

Isaac has two sons, Esau and Jacob. Jacob is given a new name by God, Israel. He has twelve sons, and his descendants are collectively known as Israelites. They make up what was to become the nation of Israel.

One of Jacob's sons, Joseph, ends up in Egypt as the second-in-charge under Pharaoh. He invites his father and family to live in Egypt. However, after several generations, the Egyptians grow wary of the Israelites living amongst them, and try to control them by making them slaves and killing all the newborn male children.

Year: 2433 A.M./1571 B.C. (Moses' birth)

Moses

For a more detailed treatment, see Moses.

One of the children who was supposed to be killed was hidden in a floating basket on the river, where he was found by Pharaoh's daughter, who raised him as her own son. She named him Moses.

When Moses was older, God called Moses to lead the enslaved Israelites out of Egypt, to the land of Canaan, which God had promised to Abraham years earlier. This journey, which took 40 years because the people disobeyed God, is known as the 'exodus'. During the exodus, God gave Moses numerous laws for the emerging nation, including the famous Ten Commandments, which God wrote Himself on stone tablets.

Year: 2553 A.M./1451 B.C. (Israelites enter Canaan)

Time of the judges

For more detailed treatments, see Judges of Israel and Twelve Tribes of Israel.

The Israelites, in twelve separate tribes mostly corresponding to the twelve sons of Israel, settled in different parts of Canaan.[1]

There was initially no central government, but from time to time God appointed individuals, known as judges to lead the people. However, the Israelites yearned for a king to rule over them, as surrounding countries had.

Year: 2909 A.M./1095 B.C. (Saul becomes king)

The Kings of Israel

For more detailed treatments, see King David and Solomon.

God gave the people what they wanted by appointing Saul as their king. During his rein, Israel was challenged by the Philistine army, and in particular by a giant named Goliath. The Israelite army was afraid of Goliath, but a shepherd boy, bringing supplies to his older brothers in the army, offered to take on Goliath. This was David, and he used his sling to knock Goliath unconscious, then beheaded him. David went on to fight other battles, and eventually succeeded Saul as King. David also made Jerusalem the capital of the country.

David was succeeded by his son Solomon, and the kingdom enjoyed its greatest prosperity. Solomon constructed the first temple in Jerusalem.

Year: 3029 A.M./975 B.C. (kingdom divided)

The divided kingdom

For more detailed treatments, see Kingdom of Judah and Northern Kingdom.

After Solomon's death, his two sons divided the kindom in two. The southern part, comprising the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, became known as Judah, whilst the northern part, comprising the other ten tribes, retained the name Israel. (It is from the name Judah that we get the word Jew.[2])

In 721 B.C. Israel was taken by Shalmaneser, with many of the people taken back to Babylon. The people of the kindom of Israel lost their identity, intermarrying with their conquerors.

Year: 3416 A.M./588 B.C. (exile begins)

The exile

Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, invaded the southern kingdom, Judah, and Jerusalam was taken. Many of the people were taken to Babylon, but in this case they remained separate and maintained their own identity.

In 3468 A.M./537 B.C. the Israelites in Babylon were allowed to return to their country and rebuild Jerusalem.

All modern Jews trace their ancestry to these members of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. People descended from the northern ten tribes, no longer pure Israelites, were treated as outcasts. This includes those known as Samaritans.

Year: 4000 A.M./5 B.C. (Jesus' birth)

Jesus

For a more detailed treatment, see Jesus Christ.

The Bible's history then jumps forward 400 years. During this time the Roman Empire conquered the land, and Israel (the former Judah) has become a vassal state of Rome.

Jesus is born to Mary, a resident of the Galilean town of Nazareth, but whilst she and her husband Joseph are in Bethlehem for a census. Joseph and Mary flee to Egypt to escape King Herod's slaughter of all the young boys of the area. They later return to Nazareth, where Jesus grows up, learning carpentry from his father. Apart from an incident in the temple in Jerusalem when Jesus was 12, nothing else of his life is recorded in the Bible until he begins his ministry when he is 30 years old.

Jesus gathers a following of twelve disciples, and travels around Israel teaching, forgiving sin, healing, and performing other miracles. His implicit and explicit claims to be God and his flouting of the petty rules that have been introduced to the religion make the religious leaders his enemies. The religions leaders petition Pilate, the governor, to have him arrested and killed. Pilate reluctantly agrees to their request, and Jesus is executed by the Romans by means of crucifixion.

Demonstrating his power over death, Jesus returns to life after being interred in a sealed cave. He then continues his ministry for a short while, before ascending to heaven.

Year: 4038 A.M./A.D. 35 (Saul's conversion)

Paul

For a more detailed treatment, see Saint Paul.

Saul, also known as Paul, was a Jew with Roman citizenship who was hunting down members of the new sect of followers of Jesus when was dramatically converted (Acts 9:1-19; 22:6-16; 26:14-18). He subsequently became a leader of the new movement, or at least, the prominent character Luke writres about in his history, the Book of Acts. The followers of the Lord Jesus became known as Christians (Acts 11:26). He undertook several missionary journeys around the Roman Empire, preaching, debating, and starting churches. Paul's letters to individuals and churches make up much of the New Testament. He is known to have written Romans, Corinthians (First and Second), Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Thessalonians (First and Second), Timothy (First and Second), and Philemon. Some think that he wrote Hebrews, but the evidence for that is disputed.

External links

References

  1. One tribe, the Levites, were given no land, as they were the priests and were supported by the rest of the population. However, descendants of Joseph's two sons each made up a separate tribe, so that there were still twelve groups.
  2. Online Etymology Dictionary