Hey, this is Lindsay at Bible Project. I produce the podcast. We're currently in a series where we've been talking about how the Bible was formed, and right now we're taking questions for our upcoming question and response episode for that series. You can record your question and submit it to us on our website at BibleProject.com slash QR by June 6th,
Let us know your name and where you're from. Try to keep your question to about 20 seconds. And please transcribe your question in the form provided because it's super helpful to our team. We're looking forward to hearing from you. Here's the episode.
When we interact with a Bible, we're interacting with a single book bound together nicely. You can grab it with one hand. You can carry it with you to church under your arm. Now, this can hide the fact that what we have is really an assortment of literary works all bound together in a final collection. And so, how did this collection come to be? How was the Bible formed?
we can start to tell ourselves a simplified story of the making of the Bible. Perhaps God zapped a series of prophets who transcribed what God said, and once that was all written down, it was never changed. We'll call this the golden tablets story of the Bible. My first couple years as a Christian, I had been given a golden tablets falling from heaven view of the Bible. And that view didn't match what I was seeing in the manuscript history.
What Christians call the Old Testament, what the Jewish people call the Hebrew Bible or Tanakh, went through an iterative process of development by scribes and prophets over the long history of Israel. And it came to its final shape in the late 400s BC and perhaps into the time of Jesus.
The Bible didn't drop out of heaven. It was formed over generations by a prophetic literary crew. This is the crew that gives us the Hebrew Bible in the late post-exilic phase. And it's a museum exhibit. And the material in the exhibit comes from all the different phases and periods of Israelite history.
To believe the Bible was formed this way doesn't negate that it can also be God's word to us. When key authors or prophets at the end of the process, like Daniel or Zechariah, reflect back on the whole treasure of these texts,
They refer to it as a gift of God's Spirit, as being not just connected to individuals that are named, but to all of the prophetic scribes that brought us these texts as being under the guidance of the Spirit.
In the 500 years following their return from exile, Israel rebuilds Solomon's temple. And then they're taken over by Persia. And then taken over again by Alexander the Great. And then taken over again by Rome. And it's during this time that the Hebrew Bible was brought to its final form. The Hebrew Bible begins to spread as a unified collection of
and just make a huge impact because everything around the 300s, the 200s, the 100s BC in Jerusalem and out in the Diaspora, everything written just takes for granted that the Tanakh is the thing. Torah of Moses, the writings of the prophets are just taken for granted. This is our scriptural heritage. And so today we continue our conversation about the formation of the Bible.
This conversation isn't meant to take away from our belief in the divinity of the Bible, but rather to hold a high view of Scripture while also acknowledging the humans who shaped these sacred texts. I think that a robust Christian faith can endure and that you'll actually walk out with a much richer and deeper conviction about the Bible as God's Word. Thanks for joining us. Here we go. Hey, Tim. Hello, John. Hi. Hi. Hi.
So we've been talking about how the Bible was formed. Yes. Crash course in the making of the Bible. Yeah. Yes. There's stories in the Bible talking about the Bible being written down, starting with Moses writing things down. And this would often happen that a scroll in the Bible or a collection of scrolls would be attributed to a key prophet. Yeah.
And you also showed us how there is an obvious later editorial voice in these scrolls. Someone who would be much later than Moses or whoever the prophet was inserting their point of view and shaping the scroll later. So you brought up in the story of Abraham, how when Abraham's going to sacrifice Isaac. Yeah.
the narrator pipes in and says, this is why on the Mount of Yahweh, we say, God will provide, as somebody said. Yeah. It will be provided. Yeah, it will be seen to. It will be seen to. Yeah. So that's coming from perspective of somebody who's trying to connect this old story of what happened with Abraham and Isaac to what is called today, referring to the liturgy of
and offerings in the Jerusalem temple. Yeah. Yeah. That's many hundreds of years of a gap between the story of Abraham and then the voice speaking. So the punchline was that these scrolls are mosaics, was a word you were using. Yeah, they're mosaics. They're traditional literature that was passed down and shaped over the course of many generations. And when...
when key authors or prophets at the end of the process, like Daniel or Zechariah, reflect back on the whole treasure of these texts. They refer to it as a gift of God's Spirit, and they refer to it as being the work of the key prophets named, you know, Moses.
or in Isaiah or Jeremiah, but then also of these other prophets or scribes who are all the links in the chain from the past down to their present. Yeah. So that's reconfiguring notions of authorship and of Holy Spirit inspiration as being not just connected to individuals that are named in the scrolls, but
to all of the prophetic scribes that brought us these texts as being under the guidance of the Spirit. Right. And so then I get this picture of this literary crew. Mm-hmm. Probably not a very big circle of people. Really? Well, I mean, you know, you got Moses and the Levites and the priests. Okay. They were already a subset of a subset, you know, of the people of Israel. Okay.
You get the idea throughout the Torah and prophets that most Israelites really were not hanging on to covenant faithfulness. It was always a minority crew. You definitely get that once you get into the prophets' writings themselves. It's a minority report.
The Hebrew Bible comes to us as a minority report from the history of culture of ancient Israel. However, there was a key transition as the Tanakh collection came into its kind of final form that the community of exiles from Babylon that came back to Jerusalem came
it actually seems like a large number of them were trying to hang on to covenant faithfulness. And Ezra and Nehemiah shows us stories from that period that shows that
Most of the elders and most of the tribal leaders were really trying. They didn't always succeed. In fact, they often failed at covenant faithfulness. And that's what makes Ezra and Nehemiah so interesting. Okay. So you brought up Ezra and Nehemiah. There's a story, isn't there, where they come back to the land and they read. Yes. Yeah. So what are they reading? They're reading the words. Yeah. They're reading from some version of the Torah prophets that have the
lineage to the one that we have for us. Whether it's exactly the form that we have it, we don't know. But it's a meta moment within the collection. Because Ezra and Nehemiah is not in the collection, obviously. Yet. It
In terms of when you're reading the story. As you're reading the story. Yeah, totally. And so if there was any more shaping by the editorial crew post Ezra Nehemiah, they would have had a slightly different version. And that feels a little uncomfortable. Why does that feel uncomfortable for you? I mean, we kind of talked about this at the end of our last conversation. We talked about this already. And that's why I'm just saying it again. You're just sitting in the... If we want to believe the Bible's trustworthy, the simple story is...
It fell out of the sky, fully formed, without any errors. That's kind of how maybe I was taught to think about it. Instead of this history of being shaped and iterated on. Yeah. It's so interesting, though, but I can so quickly flip that in my head and be like, I'm suspicious of tablets falling out of heaven. That's true. And if it all fell out of heaven, claiming to have no human history of development behind it.
these texts, a million questions or objections come up in my mind, right? So you can flip it both ways. You can say, actually, it's very traceable history of human involvement and development. Also can give it another kind of legitimacy that this is about a God who is deeply involved in
in the life of his human covenant partners and invites them and their stories to participate in the divine story. Yeah, God's spirit works through humans in human history. That's right. But Ezra and Nehemiah, something very pivotal happened in the exile and in the community of returned exiles. So now we're into the 500s B.C.,
even into the 400s, and this is all what Ezra and Nehemiah is about, is that it seems like the majority of that crew, and we're just talking about a few tens of thousands of people that returned out of what seemed like a larger number that were dispersed in the exile. So by crew, you mean everyone who came back to the land. Mm-hmm, that's right. And there were still Israelites, Pharisees,
from other tribes still in and around the vicinity. And this is a part of, I won't rehearse what Ezra and Nehemiah are about. We have videos about them that'll do a quicker job than I can do now. But the point was that this crew that returned was certainly the crew that took the earlier proto versions of most of the biblical books to Babylon with them and studied them and learned from them and realized God had been speaking to them through these prophets in a way that most of
Israel never paid attention to. So the crew that comes back has a large number of people that wants to be faithful to these writings. And Ezra, he's called a sofer mehir, an efficient scribe, a trained scribe in the Torah of Moses. So he surely represented a crew of scribes and priests that were like Bible nerds. And Tanakh definitely had a key point of shaping in that time.
So it's to that crew, you can start to then kind of extrapolate. Ezra's crew. Ezra's crew. What are the latest events talked about in the Hebrew Bible? Yeah. Well, you've got Ezra and Nehemiah, which takes you down somewhere into the early, maybe 400s. BC. BC, yep. The story of Esther is happening, you know, out in a Persian city, out in the diaspora. Persia takes place...
It's in the mid-400s. Mid-400s, okay. There's a lot of debate around the precise dating of Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther. But these are the latest events talked about within the Tanakh. That's the events talked about. But then the shaping of the books themselves would have needed to happen after that. So we're talking like somewhere in the late 400s, mid-300s, that the Hebrew Bible is really taking its final collection and shape.
So we've talked about this before, and maybe we even did in the last episode, but you can start to trace what must have been some of the final layers of compositional shaping and coordination.
of the scrolls of the Hebrew Bible. Because remember, they weren't in a codex, a book. They were in a collection of scrolls, probably in a room with a wall with a bunch of holes in it. But the beginnings and endings of many scrolls in the collection show signs of hyperlinking and coordination.
We've talked about these in the past, but the beginning and ending sections of the Torah, so the seven-day narrative, the Eden narrative, shows remarkable coordination with the final chapters of Deuteronomy, of blessing and curse, of people being in a garden land with a choice between good and bad. What are you going to do? The beginning of the prophets with Joshua, the ending of the prophets with Malachi, the
shows lots of coordination between them and between the beginnings and endings of the Torah. So Joshua was supposed to read a scroll of the Torah and meditate on it day and night.
and he'll have success no matter what he does. That's how Joshua begins. That's how Joshua begins. He's described as a new Adam and Eve type figure who is to subdue the land. So it's connected to both the end of Deuteronomy and the beginning of Genesis. Exactly, yes. You get the same thing at the ending of Malachi, which talks about a great day of Yahweh that's coming. Malachi is the last of the prophetic books. That's right. Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and then the 12 prophets, and then Malachi is the last of the 12 prophets.
And he starts talking about a day when there'll be a separation of the righteous and the wicked, when the day of the Lord comes. And actually, this is rad. The significance of a little passage near the end of Malachi is becoming more clear to me. It's near the end of what we call chapter 3 of Malachi. And it describes a crew of people who are just called those who fear Yahweh, who get together and talk.
And the Lord paid attention, Yahweh paid attention, and he heard them. And a scroll for remembering was written before him for those who fear the Lord and who honor his name. They belong to me, says Yahweh, on the day that I will make my precious possession known.
and I am going to have compassion on them like a man has compassion on his child who serves him, and you will see a distinction between the righteous and the wicked. This is describing, I think, the self-perception of
of the group of Bible nerds who gave us the Hebrew Bible. Really? Yes. Yeah. Yeah, it says, the Lord gave attention and heard them. A scroll. A scroll of remembering. A scroll of remembering was written. Why is it in the passive? Was written before him. And who's the him? Yeah, before God. Before God, okay. Yeah, for those who fear the Lord. So they wrote this scroll. This is a group of people.
who they fear the Lord and they honor his name. Unlike many Israelites. Right. The majority. Yeah. And this group is aware of themselves as being my own special possession. This is what God said to all of Israel sitting at the foot of Mount Sinai in Exodus 19. So they're embracing that identity. If you listen to my voice and obey my covenant, you will be my special possession. Okay. So this subgroup of Israel has taken on itself
the name that God gave to ideal Israel that lives faithfully to the covenant. And so they're writing the scroll of remembering. They get together and they talk. They speak to each other. And when they speak to each other, God listens. Okay. And it's interesting, what are they talking about? Well, they have this scroll for remembering that is written in the presence of God.
But it's for this group who fears the Lord. So this is like embryonic seed awareness of the Bible. I see. This is a crew of people who gets together and they read scripture together. They meditate on it. They talk about it. This is the group that is trying to show us the ideal reader of scripture in Joshua. That's why they're portraying Joshua as like the ideal leader.
Torah meditator who's like Moses who led the people. I also love they're doing it in community. Oh, yeah. Come on. That's why I thought you would like this. Okay. Put a pin here. So that's the ending of Malachi. In the Tanakh, the next body of sub-collections of the Hebrew Bible is the Ketuvim, the writing. Because what you're saying is we're going through the different seams of the different parts of the Bible. We just ended with the prophets. The next collection is the writings. Yes. And
in many traditional orderings of the writings. And I think the one that probably reflects the oldest arrangement has the Psalms as the heading for the Ketuvim. Why would I say that? The beginnings and ending of scrolls seem really important for the hyperlinking coordination on this macro level. And Psalm 1 and 2 begin with these meditations on... Being a Bible reader. Yes, and it's exactly the language from Joshua 1.
And much of the language from the ending of Malachi, Psalm 1 is about a separation between the righteous and the wicked. The path of the wicked leads to ruin. The path of the righteous leads to the tree of life. And the focus of the good life person, who's the tree of life, is that he meditates on the scriptures day and night. You're like, oh, it's like the crew at the end of Malachi. So ending of Malachi, the beginning of Psalms, is giving us a self-awareness
of this crew connected to Ezra, I think, because the prophet Malachi is assuming that a second temple has been built and that it's not going very well and that many Israelites don't fear the Lord. So somewhere in the late post-exile period, Ezra and his crew and later the final books of the Hebrew Bible, like Esther, Daniel, seems like it underwent shaping.
until somewhere in the 300s or 200s. But also Daniel himself is depicted as a Bible nerd, who's meditating on the book of Jeremiah one day when he gets a really important dream vision. So all of a sudden you start to see the Hebrew Bible is coming to us like a museum exhibit of the whole story of Israel.
But the final curating and arrangement of it comes out of a long process. And the form we have it is from this crew that prayerfully read these texts. Going back to Malachi, it doesn't even say that they wrote them. What it says is the scroll was written. And you're like, well, it had to be written by somebody. Yeah.
But what they want to highlight is less the human authorship and the fact that through these written texts that are obviously written by people, when they read them and discuss them in community, they hear God talking to them. And they hear God saying, you are my people who are going to be the ones who carry on this hope of a covenant partnership between God and his people. What do you think they were writing? Do you think it was...
It says a scroll. Yeah, I know. So it seems like a particular scroll instead of... I mean, you could imagine them doing that editorial work across a bunch of scrolls. Right. And like bring it together and having these lively discussions of Moses said this. And isn't it interesting that Joshua was told to be a Bible nerd and like making sure that that was highlighted in the text. But it says they're working on a scroll. A scroll. It's very similar to how Psalm 1 opens that just says, you know, how good...
is life for the one who doesn't do a bunch of things, but who does meditate on the Torah Yahweh, the Torah of Yahweh. So it doesn't say scroll, but once again, it's referring to the scriptures as a singular thing, which maybe this speaks to
We've talked about this over the years, this awareness that even though there's a bunch of different physical scrolls, these 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. So you think it's possible that...
Malachi is just calling it a scroll of remembering, referring to the whole collection? The scriptural collection. Interesting. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Interesting that phrase written for remembering connects back to the first mention of writing in the Torah at all in Exodus 17. Why Moses wrote down that story. Yeah. Write it in a scroll for remembering. And that was a rescue story. Salvation rescuing his people. Yeah.
So we get these two paired ideas all the way back to our last conversation. God rescuing his people to enter into a covenant partnership so that through them he can do what he wants to do for all the nations and all of creation. And the rescue and the covenant. These are the core ideas underneath the concept of the Bible. What is the Bible? It's a group of texts that come from the tradition of the prophets guided by God's spirit to tell the story of how God's
rescuing people and his world and doing it through covenant partners who will be faithful. When they're unfaithful, things go terrible.
but if god has a faithful crew to work with who will treasure the the story and the covenant writings that's the group that gives us the hebrew bible and i mean dude we could go on like the chronicle scroll is so rad because it certainly comes from the same crew okay and that's clearly a mosaic yeah the first word of the scroll is adam and it's a genealogy
Tracing all the characters in the Hebrew Bible, starting with Adam and Eve. Yeah. It's a creative remix of the Hebrew Bible. On down through the last paragraph of Chronicles is this edict of a Persian king, Cyrus, who invites all the exiles to come back. And it's copy and paste from the first sentences of Ezra and Nehemiah. And what's fascinating, actually, is
Chronicles is like a musical. Everybody's breaking out into song all the time. But what they are singing from is psalms from the psalm scroll. And many of the psalms that are being quoted from by different Israelites through history are psalms that if you go read them in psalms or read the superscriptions, they clearly tell you they were written long after. The events? The events being talked about in Chronicles. But they're putting those words in their mouth. So when David brings the ark to Jerusalem... Uh-huh.
In the Chronicles version of that story, it tells you all these songs that they're singing. But they're singing like all these copy and paste paragraphs from Psalms that in the book of Psalms very clearly are written after the exile. Again, this goes back to our... Yeah, that tension. That makes you uncomfortable. Yeah. But it's a fact.
Yeah, because if you want to know what actually did they sing, what song did they actually sing? If that's what I care about, then I'm going to be kind of scandalized here. But if I'm really interested in what was, why did that moment matter? What am I supposed to learn from it? Then I can be more comfortable in a later kind of literary nerdy scribe.
moved by God's spirit to give me more of a creative way to think about it. Yeah, to imagine that the songs that we, after the exile, hear the Levites singing in the second temple...
That they are telling us the truth about what God has been wanting to do in this temple since the day it was founded by David. So they retell that story in light of the later songs of the Levites that we have in the Psalms. Now in the modern world, we wouldn't call that history. Right? Sure. Yeah, that's right. And that's because our concept of historical writing
has gone through 2,000 years of development in the modern Western culture. And the assumptions we have about history writing were not all shared by all people of all places and times. But that doesn't mean that in these other places and times, all they were writing was like fiction. They're really preserving their family memories. And they are just doing it in a culturally different style than we think of history writing. And that's our problem, not theirs, you know? Yeah.
This is the crew that gives us the Hebrew Bible in the late post-exilic phase. And it's mosaic. It's a museum exhibit. And the material in the exhibit comes from all the different phases and periods of Israelite history. At some point, this collection of the Hebrew scriptures, the Torah, the prophets, and the Psalms, was viewed as a collected whole.
It was all written in Hebrew with a bit of Aramaic layered in there. And there is an argument to be made, some scholars have made it, that the Chronicle Scroll was written as a kind of canonical climax, as it were, because the history of Israel didn't stop after the period of Ezra and Nehemiah. It full-on kept raging and becoming really complex as ever was. But some group that gave us the Tanakh
thought that telling the story up to the hope for the return from the exile and then the disappointing events that happened in those first generations after the return from the exile and stopping it there, that there was a completeness to that way of telling the family story. And to continue on further would begin to change its meaning. That's the crew and that's what we call the Torah Prophets and Writings. ♪
Okay, so here's what's really fascinating. The history of Israel didn't stop with the return from exile, and the literary creativity of scribes and prophets in and around Jerusalem out in the diaspora also didn't stop. In fact, if anything, it cranked up. So what we have in a body of Israelite literature that's called Second Temple literature, because it all assumes that
The post-exile situation. Yeah, meaning the first temple, Solomon's temple, was destroyed when they went into exile. They come back. This is Ezra and Nehemiah's time. They rebuild the temple. This is what we mean by second temple. That's right. Yeah. And so you've got a crew living in and around Jerusalem and Judea.
And then you've got people either migrating to other parts of the traditional lands of the Israelite tribes, or you've got people who are just Israelites who were scattered abroad in the many centuries since or after, called the diaspora or the scattering. And so both in Jerusalem and Judea, where life centers around the temple, and in the diaspora, the Tanakh,
The Hebrew Bible. Yeah, Hebrew Bible begins to spread as a unified collection and just make a huge impact because everything starting around the 300s, the 200s, the 100s BC in Jerusalem and out in the diaspora, everything written by Israelites after that in this period just takes for granted that the Tanakh is the thing.
The Torah of Moses, the writings of the prophets, and the writings we have are just taken for granted. This is our scriptural heritage. Okay. So during this time, Second Temple period time, Israel is...
reforming their identity. They're processing everything that happened. There is some sort of proto-Tanakh that's kind of getting close to being completed and comes to its final shape during this time. And...
Yeah.
That's what we call the Tanakh. And you said this is a very highly kind of literary culture suddenly. Yeah. Because a lot of other literary works are happening, being written, and they all take for granted. Yes. Meaning they all are aware of what's in the Tanakh, all the themes, all the ideas, and they are just riffing off of those. But they're no longer like being added to the Tanakh. Yeah. So what we're calling now is the body of text called the Apocrypha.
or Deuterocanon that will be in the later Deuterocanon, and then pseudepigrapha. Yeah, just all the Second Temple literature, which includes what ends up as the Deuterocanon. That's right. Yeah, exactly. And almost all of this literature, it's sort of like what you could call it like, we already talked about this, but it all is imitating the Hebrew Bible.
So you've got a really amazing text written somewhere out in the diaspora, you know, maybe the second century BC called the Wisdom of Solomon. And it says that it's coming from Solomon. Right. It was written in Greek. Yeah. Solomon didn't know. Yeah. And so there's debates about was the author trying to really pass it off as Solomon? Get people to think that? Or was it kind of like a literary fiction? Yeah.
That's meant to imagine, man, if Solomon could speak to our diaspora communities here today. And then what the wisdom of Solomon is, is it's somebody who knows the Hebrew Bible so well, but knows it in Greek. And has woven together a meditation on how to live faithfully to the covenant of Israel with God and by the wisdom of Solomon today.
and has woven these poems that are just some of the most remarkable reflections on what biblical faith looks like in the Greek-speaking diaspora. Solomon for Greeks. At the end of our first conversation, you mentioned how
One reason you value reading those texts like the Wisdom of Solomon is because you're reading kind of early biblical theology from people who are super Bible nerds. They understand the Hebrew Bible. Now they live in new culture. It's a culture that's much more closely related to the culture of Jesus. And they're working through in this very complex new cultural environment. What does this mean to follow Yahweh and to have wisdom and to be...
God-fearers. Yes, that's right. Because a key event happened.
In the 300s BC that reshaped the entire ancient world of ancient, you know, Eastern Europe and then what we call the Middle East and the East. And that is a guy who... Alexander the Great. Alexander the Great. Alex, the great guy, who was such a successful military campaigner, he became convinced that he was a god by the end of his campaign because he stormed the ancient world and spread...
the value of Greek language and culture, even though he's a Macedonian. He was a fan of everything Greek, and the whole world changed after him. And he did his thing right as the Hebrew Bible was coming into its final shaping. And so that's why a very early version of the Hebrew Bible was written in Greek.
So the Hebrew Bible, beginning in the probably late 300s, but then really in the 200s, was rendered into Greek. And that's a whole subfield of biblical studies. It's awesome, called Septuagint studies. And here's what's so fascinating. So you've got the Hebrew Bible spreading through synagogue networks throughout the diaspora. And you've also then got Greek translations of the Hebrew Bible spreading out and spreading
Those Greek translations often preserve for us versions of biblical books that give us a window into the final editorial shaping of those biblical books. This is super fascinating. Okay, what do you mean? So the manuscript witnesses to the Hebrew Bible that we had before the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls
actually comes from the early medieval and medieval periods, like the 600s AD or later. And then you get the Dead Sea Scrolls, which are our earliest Hebrew versions of biblical books. And what the Dead Sea Scrolls showed us was, whoa, many of the books of the Hebrew Bible went through a few editions or existed in the Second Temple period in different editions.
So, for example, in Among the Dead Sea Scrolls, there's witnesses to two versions of Jeremiah, one of which is about an eighth shorter and in a different arrangement. And lo and behold, it's that shorter edition of Jeremiah that was in front of the Greek translators of Jeremiah.
And so that's the version that got translated into Greek and then got spread throughout the diaspora communities. Ezekiel is in a shorter version. This is what I did my dissertation on, the shorter version, Ezekiel. So what this shows us is actually that in that late Second Temple period, the manuscript history of these texts, we actually get a window into the final stages of the shaping of the Tanakh.
And, well, I'm just raising a whole set of issues that we don't have time to talk about. But my point is that we can actually begin to pinpoint the 3rd century and 2nd centuries... B.C. or A.D.? B.C. B.C. As part of the stages of the final formation. And the actual textual form of certain biblical books could still be fluid, undergoing little modifications later.
But that didn't affect the shape of the collection as a whole. In other words, Jeremiah was never questioned as whether it's in the Tanakh or out of the Tanakh. But the version of Jeremiah, the textual version of it, was still being negotiated into the 3rd and 2nd century. What are the Dead Sea Scrolls dated to? They come to us from the 2nd and 1st centuries BC and then the 1st century AD. So the point is that
Well, here, I'll just maybe give a personal anecdote. It was this set of issues that thoroughly scrambled and forced me to reckon with all of this. And back in my mid-20s and early graduate school days, these were the questions that really bothered me, that motivated me to spend a lot of time on them.
Because I realized in my first couple years as a Christian, I had been given a golden tablets falling from heaven view of the Bible. And that view didn't match what I was seeing in the manuscript history and learning about in the manuscript and translation history of the Bible. Yeah, the manuscript history looks a lot more like you would just imagine what human activity would do. Especially in kind of a more...
slightly decentralized way where different communities who are all honoring this text are part of this literary culture. And part of that culture is you can adapt it. And that doesn't mean you're
Doing something wrong? No, just the opposite. All of these little manuscript differences are all in the effort of making the scroll more clear in its meaning. They're a little interpretive or often hyperlinked modifications. But at some point we got a community's version. Exactly, totally. So what's very interesting is somewhere in that little window in the 3rd, 2nd centuries BC, the final forms of the biblical books are taking shape because at some point
these modifications stop. And instead of showing your interpretation or reading of the Tanakh by little modifications, you just make a new scroll. You make a new book.
Oh. And this is what we call Second Temple Jewish literature. Oh, okay. All the creative energy that was put towards... The final shaping of the Tanakh. The shaping of the Tanakh. Yeah. That comes to a completion. Everyone shifts that energy too. Let's just make new creative literary works. New scrolls. Yeah, exactly. Totally. And the third to second century BC is a...
I see. All those new works just start to blossom. That's right. So there's so much we don't know. You have to infer from just the literary remains. But you start to get this picture, that crew speaking to us from the end of Malachi comes from those final stages. And there's an awareness of this growl. It's a thing. And at some point, the activity and the focus shifts to, okay, well now what does the Tanakh mean to
For a community of faithful Jews who's not living in Jerusalem or Judea, right? That wasn't a part of the circle that gave us the final form of the Tanakh. What does the Tanakh have to say to Greek-speaking Jews living in the diaspora? Yeah. You know? Let's write some new scrolls about that. Asia Minor. Wisdom Solomon can help us with that.
So Wisdom of Solomon is like a translating of the message of the Tanakh, but for a new culture and time. And that's what all of these Second Temple works are, that are called by later categories, Apocrypha and Deuterocanon, is their Second Temple Jewish attempts to bring the truth of the Tanakh into a later generation.
And one of those Second Temple Jewish communities came to birth in the first century A.D. that we known as the Jesus Movement. Okay, okay. One of those Second Temple communities, meaning Israelites working through how we would be faithful to Yahweh in light of the fact that now Rome. Totally. First, Greece.
And then everything that came out of after Alexander the Great leading up to Rome. Now, there's a lot. We're talking about three centuries of a gap there between Alexander the Great and Jesus. And there was a lot of complicated history and development of ideas that took place in that period. And so all the Jewish writings that come from this period are so valuable today.
Because they show us how Jewish people heard God speaking to them through the Tanakh and how they translated its wisdom into their times and places. And there's developed thinking about
Every topic you can think of in the Hebrew. There's a lot of writing during this time so much writing. Yeah, Jewish writing Yeah, yeah, and so they're meditating on the nature of the Covenant the hope of the future renewed covenant It's almost like the nature of the Tanakh just inspired so much literary artists as if the Tanakh is an unfinished story Oh, there's that too. It was intentionally finished with the pre mature unfinished
Yeah, yeah. It's pointing you to... There's a completion to it in its form, but the story itself is just a cliffhanger. It's waiting for the day of the Lord and the days of the Messiah to bring about the new covenant and bring justice and peace and Eden to earth. That's what the Hebrew Bible is about. Yeah. But the nature of...
Being a Bible nerd makes you begin to appreciate how the Bible works as literature. Yes. Right? Yes, that's right. So you're going to have a whole culture of people who are reading and thinking about and discussing literature. And so it just kind of makes sense then that this culture becomes...
prolific in creating more literature. You got it. Yeah, that's right. Yep. So Second Temple Judaism is a highly literate and literary creative culture. Working out the ideas that the Tanakh lays up and says, in a complete way, this is God's word for us, but leaves you hanging to then how is this going to end? Yeah. Yep. And in some sub-communities, Judaism becomes very diverse. Right.
in this period. And so different communities began to develop different kind of regional traditions and practices. So the crew, you know, down at the Dead Sea community, it's a group of priests that leave Jerusalem because they think the things happening there are terrible. So they go restart their own
renewed Israel down in the desert, waiting for the days of the Messiah, will be the faithful ones. I'm sure they thought of themselves as that Malachi crew, like in their generation. And they not only valued the Tanakh, they really valued a broad library of literature in addition to the Tanakh. What's called the Enoch literature,
There were new works that would retell the stories of the Tanakh, but in a highly interpreted form. So there's a book called the Jubilees. It's a retelling of Genesis onward, but in a highly interpreted kind of paraphrased way. And there are actually more copies, for example, of the Enoch literature and of Jubilees among the Dead Sea Scrolls than there are copies of Jeremiah or Ezekiel. They were like more popular than
Probably because they were easier to understand because it was written for their time and place. Getting the picture that
There's different versions of the Tanakh, slightly different versions because this is a decentralized kind of literary exercise across many different Jewish communities.
But at some point, there was a sense of like, here's the one. Right? Here's the thing. Yes. The problem is that there was no event or council that defined that moment. Okay. We have to infer that moment from the literary and manuscript remains, which show us that it happened in regional ways,
over a period of a century or so, somewhere in the 300s to 200s BC. At what point is it very clear there's no longer different versions? Oh, man. You would have to go, begin to go into the 1st and 2nd century AD. 1st and 2nd century AD? Yeah. And what would these examples be? Oh, well, for example, the standardized version of the Hebrew Bible, known to us as what's called the Masoretic Text, the Masoretic Version,
There was the Hebrew Bible of Judaism from the first century onwards. That was one textual version of the Hebrew Bible among multiple textual versions of kind of longer, shorter versions of some biblical books.
And that diversity seems to end when Rome destroyed Jerusalem in 70 AD. Okay. That event seems to maybe... Was very catalytic. Okay. There was a porous nature to the boundaries of the Hebrew Bible. And there was comfort in the Hebrew Bible existing alongside other Second Temple literature.
But an awareness that like there's a core, the Tanakh, and then there's the other stuff around the core. We read it along with it. It's generated. It's all interpretation of it.
After Rome destroys Jerusalem, the diversity of Jewish expression really consolidates down into one subgroup that we know as Rabbinic Judaism. That's kind of the seedbed of what Judaism has become ever since 70 AD. And that became then the manuscript tradition of the Masoretic Text. Correct, yes. And the earliest Masoretic Texts that we have that our Bibles are based off of... Yeah, is that.
And it's manuscripts that are around 600 A.D.? Correct. Yeah, that's right. But from that tradition. That's right. And then when we found the Dead Sea Scrolls. That's, you know, back from 70 A.D. It takes us back 200, sometimes 300 years. So my Bible is based off of the Masoretic text. So the version of the Tanakh that I have, or the Old Testament that I have, is based off of that. And the confession is that God's Spirit worked through that, and that's God's Word. Mm-hmm.
when we get the Dead Sea Scrolls, you said there was... Yeah, they are Tanakh nerds. They know Tanakh. But we found segments of the Isaiah Scroll or different things. And isn't it true that it matched pretty highly correlated? Yes, yes, totally. For the manuscripts among the Dead Sea Scrolls that match the Masoretic text of later Jewish tradition, it's remarkable.
How similar they are. But the fly in the ointment is that the Dead Sea Scroll community actually had different versions in their own library. So they have multiple manuscripts of Jeremiah, some of them from a shorter edition in Hebrew, some of them from a longer edition in Hebrew. And they had both of them. Yeah.
And this doesn't seem to have been a problem for them. But that diversity, the manuscript diversity and the cultural diversity of Judaism really changed after 70 AD. And it's also interesting then that the valuing of this broader literary tradition of Second Temple Jewish literature stopped.
Jewish communities stopped preserving most of all the Second Temple literature. When? After the temple was destroyed? After 70 AD. And what's valued foremost is the Hebrew Bible, Tanakh. Okay.
and then the teachings of the rabbis. The Jewish community stopped reading most of Second Temple literature. The only reason why we have it today is because early Christians valued them. The only reason there is a thing called the Apocrypha or the Deuterocanon, which is all Second Temple Jewish literature, is not because Jewish communities preserved them. They didn't. It was because they were translated.
into other languages among the early Jesus movement because they found value in them. So it's a huge irony, again, in that most Protestants today don't even know about these writings because they only exist because of Jesus and the apostles in the first centuries of the Jesus movement, Christians. And many of them were Jewish. And many of them were Jewish. That's exactly right. The main question that looms in my mind is, when was the Hebrew Bible completed? Mm-hmm.
And the threat is there's no simple story. We do know that it was iterative. There were different versions. This was normal. And different Jewish communities were stewarding this. And what I have in my Bible comes from the Masoretic text tradition. When Rome destroyed the temple,
That was a catalytic event that caused Judaism to have to really centralize in order to move forward. And because of that, one version of the Tanakh became the main version. I would just slightly rephrase that. It's that before Rome destroyed the temple in Jerusalem in 70 A.D.,
Judaism existed in a widespread network of really diverse expressions, different language and culture.
And they all took for granted the Tanakh, which was centuries old as a collection by then. But if you were to ask any one of them, which one is the like? What's your Bible? What's the version that I should read? It's hard because the word Bible is a singular noun. You know what I mean? But there was awareness, like even from that at the end of Malachi.
it's a unified thing, a scroll of remembering. But it consists of many physical scrolls, but they were never all bound together in one book. So it's very possible you could go down to the Dead Sea scroll community, they probably wouldn't let you in, they'd block you at the gate. But if you could go in and be like, "So what are your scriptures?" Like they would for sure say the Torah, the prophets, and the writings, because that's a phrase that comes from the Dead Sea Scrolls themselves.
But which version of Jeremiah do you guys like better? Yeah, that's right. Well, we have two. We have the long version and the short version. And if you say, well, I mean, is there anything in addition to the Torah prophets and writings? And they would say, well, we have a ton of the Enoch literature because we think that is really vital to understanding our time and place in history today.
And we actually have more copies of that than we do have some of the books of the Tanakh. What I was taught was I can rely on the Bible because every scroll was written down by a scribe and rewritten and carefully making sure that every word was exactly as it was in the previous scroll. And so that's how I can trust it because of the scribal tradition of accuracy. Yeah, that's right. And what I'm being told here is a story of like, well, actually, it was a scribal tradition of a lot of creativity. Yeah.
And a lot of iteration. Yeah, that's right. So, for example, these multiple textual versions of Jeremiah, what all these textual versions are, are different ways of conceiving of the message of Jeremiah. Like the longer version and the short version don't mean radically different things. They don't change the meaning. Not as a core. There are some different tendencies.
that you can see, and it's a whole long rabbit hole. But this actually all goes back to the Hebrew Bible as meditation literature. It's arranged in an intentional way so that you can read it from beginning to end, but you can also read these books out of sequential order by matching together hyperlinked parts and holding them together in your mind. What these two textual versions of Jeremiah represent are...
two ways of arranging the book of Jeremiah to help you understand it. And so could the Spirit of God be speaking through both? I think emphatically yes. And can the Spirit of God work with me and give me wisdom as I read through either? Emphatically yes, because Second Temple Jewish communities came long after Alexander the Great, and you got Jewish communities with kids raised who never learned any Hebrew at all. They never read these texts in Hebrew. They only knew these texts in Greek.
And they would have only known Jeremiah in one of these versions and not the other. And yet they would have emphatically said, "God is speaking to his people." You know, I think what's landing for me is that when we talk about the Bible isn't a textbook or an answer book, it's wisdom literature meant for meditation.
that if I bring to it this framework of like the textbook and it's going to give me all the correct answers about what's true in the world as a textbook, then I'm going to really, really care like what version is completely accurate. If this is meditation literature to give me wisdom and that God's spirit works through that, there's this kind of new category I could start to live in, which is that...
this whole culture of shaping these texts, that God's spirit could work through that. And that I don't need to have the perfect version for God's spirit to then work in me as I'm meditating on them. The purpose is that I meditate on them. And then I'm thinking through
the ideas that it wants me to think through. And I'm wrestling with those. And that's what the scribes were doing as they were bringing it all together. And that's what they're inviting us to do, even though we're not any longer tweaking them. And it's through that process of meditation that we get God's wisdom.
Yeah, thank you. That was a great way of summarizing it. And how you just summarized it was so clear that some of our listeners might have alarms or feel really disoriented by what you just said. Yeah. But after many years of sitting in the complex manuscript history and formation, I and many other people I know in biblical studies have
have arrived at a similar place. For these scribes, what mattered more than just the particular version of the text were what the text is about. And different forms of Jeremiah, for example, or of Proverbs, or of Samuel, or of Ezekiel,
could in different arrangements and slightly different wording still get the same ideas across to force you, the covenant people of God, to wrestle with God's wisdom, to hear it and be challenged to live it out. And
Our obsession with specific boundaries of what texts are in or out, or of the specific textual version, those are all things that come to us after inheriting the Bible in codex form and post-printing press. Because we are so ingrained with the post-printing press, post-codex concept of the Bible that
And so it was just a different reality in the Second Temple period. And it's from those periods that people say that the Spirit of God was speaking to them through these texts. So they really believed there was something called God's Word there.
addressing them through these texts, even though the textual form and history was a little more complex than maybe makes us comfortable. Yeah. What I hear you saying is the Bible is trustworthy, bring me God's wisdom so I can know what's true about the world, about me, about the whole story of humanity. Yeah. And
That's what I care about. Not about whether this exact sentence was always written this way or came out of heaven this way. Totally. Both the boundaries of the biblical collection and the specific textual version of the biblical collection was a matter of diversity and intense conversation in Second Temple Judaism and a couple hundred years into the Jesus movement. We didn't even...
talk about the correspondence that we have of early Christian scholars post-Jesus. So here I'm talking about letter correspondence between probably the first Christian Bible scholar and theological rock star in Christian history, a guy named Origen of Alexandria. So mid-100s, he's riding back and forth with another Bible scholar and bishop named Afrikanis, Julius Afrikanis, 100 years forward from them.
letter correspondence between a Christian Bible scholar, Jerome, who's working in Bethlehem, and Augustine, who's pretty famous, you know, bishop in North Africa. And all of them are writing back and forth about how like, wait, what version of Esther and Daniel are your communities reading? Wait, they're different. You're reading the Greek version. It's longer than the Hebrew version. Which one is older? Well, we think that the longer version
Septuagint translation one is inspired by the Spirit. That's what Origen and Augustine say. And Afrikanis and Jerome say, no, the older version written in Hebrew, that surely is the Spirit speaking to us. I mean, we're like hundreds of years into the Jesus movement and these debates are still happening. So you can't just ignore that. The truth of God in the message of the scriptures and the wisdom of God
has a much more involved and complicated history of formation than tablets falling out of heaven. But God still speaks his truth to his people through texts that were made in that way. That's what I mean when I say that the Bible is God's word and that it's true and that it's authoritative. But the precise wording
and the precise boundaries of the collection have been a matter of diversity, pre-Jesus, during Jesus, and then after Jesus. But that doesn't mean it's a free-for-all, and that doesn't mean there's no such thing as the Bible. There really was a conception of the core. It was the Tanakh. And then there was a conception of a layer of literature around that, but the status of that additional layer and the wordings of biblical books were matters of
debate and conversation. And let's just come into terms with that. And I think that's all I'm inviting you and our listening audience to do is to come to terms with that because I think that a robust Christian faith in hearing God's word and scripture can endure all of that.
and that you'll actually walk out with a much richer and deeper conviction about the Bible as God's Word on the other side of that journey. Speaking of journey, one of my favorite kind of intro textbooks to this whole topic that I like to recommend to people is by a Hebrew Bible scholar, Paul Wegner, in a book called The Journey from Text to Translations: The Origin and Development of the Bible.
There are many books on the topic. I have found this to be a very intellectually honest book.
and reliable introduction to basically everything we just talked about in the last couple episodes. What's funny is that within biblical studies and within fields of biblical studies that are all committed Christians, like everything we've talked about is totally non-controversial. Like this is really actually common knowledge for people who've put in the time. And that's a lot of Bible professors at seminaries and I think informed pastors.
Like, no, there's a little more complexity here. But the simplified narratives tend to live on in the modern Christian imagination. And I want this conversation to help people. But sitting in disorientation as paradigm shifts from one to another, that usually involves some discomfort. And I acknowledge that. Again, the reason you and I even care about this topic is because we're followers of Jesus Messiah. Okay.
And Jesus himself and then Jesus through the apostles, whom he commissioned on his behalf, they all had a very clear sense of what the scriptures are and that God speaks to his people through the scriptures. And the clear core of that is the Tanakh.
and the Tanakh translated into Greek. And when he quoted from them, he'll say, as the prophet said, or sometimes even as God says. And they also tolerated a huge, what for us is an uncomfortable amount of diversity and open-endedness when it came to the precise boundaries and the wording of those scriptural texts. And if it wasn't a problem for Jesus and the apostles, then I'm going to
let it become less of a problem for me. And maybe that's what I would invite our listeners to consider. We're not done yet. What I do want to consider is then the formation of the writings that we call the New Testament, which grew up as a companion volume to the scriptures of Israel or to Tanakh in the Jesus movement. How did that happen? Huge topic. We could go for many hours. We're going to try and do it in...
one long conversation. That's the next one that we'll have. That's it for today's episode of Bible Project Podcast. Next week, we finish this quick tour of how the Bible was formed by looking at the Second Temple literature that became the New Testament. The New Testament isn't a random assemblage of independent documents. It comes from a handful of people that Jesus commissioned. And as the Jesus movement spread, this is the literature that was the fuel of the movement.
Bible Project is a crowdfunded nonprofit, and we exist to help people experience the Bible as a unified story that leads to Jesus. Everything that we make is free because of the generous support of thousands of people just like you. Thank you so much for being a part of this with us. Hi, my name is Caleb. I'm from California. Hi, my name is Elaine, and I'm from Langley, British Columbia, Canada.
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