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Season 1

  • S01E01 In the Beginning

  • S01E02 Adam and Eve

    This lecture follows Genesis selectively, episode by episode, to highlight its status as a foundational narrative, its complexity, the possible order of its composition, its ancient Near Eastern connections, and the questions it raises.

  • S01E03 Murder, Flood, Dispersion

    This lecture investigates the major themes of Genesis by analyzing the stories of Cain and Abel, Noah's Flood, the Tower of Babel, and more.

  • S01E04 Abraham, Sarah, and Hagar

    Here we meet Abraham—faithful hero, morally ambiguous trickster, and patriarch—first briefly via historical investigation, and then through a close reading of Genesis 12:10–20.

  • S01E05 Isaac

    The accounts of Abraham's son Isaac and daughter-in-law Rebecca (Genesis 21–24) provide the opportunity to introduce the method of biblical study known as ""source criticism"" as well as to demonstrate its limitations.

  • S01E06 The Jacob Saga

    The story of Isaac's sons Jacob and Esau (beginning in Genesis 25) provides an example of the insights that can be gleaned from ""form criticism."" This approach attends carefully to metaphor, double meaning, narrative voice, physical descriptions, handling of motivation, and use of dialogue.

  • S01E07 Folklore Analysis and Type Scenes

    Source and form criticism can help us understand common biblical plot lines, or ""type scenes."" Type-scene analysis, a method pioneered by folklorists, reveals narrative art and teaches about community heroes and values. Here we focus on betrothal scenes.

  • S01E08 Moses and Exodus

    Combining folklore, morality, theology and, perhaps, historical memory, Exodus 1–15 offers quick-witted women, a reluctant hero, and a mysterious deity. This lecture introduces ""text criticism"" while discussing slavery in Egypt, Moses' infancy and commission, and the Exodus itself.

  • S01E09 The God of Israel

    More than an account of the liberation of Hebrew slaves, the opening chapters of Exodus also provide insight into the name of the deity and the sources employed in the Pentateuch's composition.

  • S01E10 Covenant and Law, Part I

    Knowing the forms that legal contracts could take in the ancient Near East helps us understand the character of the covenants that the deity makes with the people (through Moses), and with individuals such as Noah, Abraham, and David.

  • S01E11 Covenant and Law, Part II

    Likely products of centuries of development, the Torah's laws concerning diet, farming, and sexual practices mark the covenant community as a holy people. Scholars still debate the laws' origin, symbolic meaning, and implementation.

  • S01E12 The “Conquest”

    With this lecture we move to Joshua, the first prophetic book. After looking briefly at the account of Moses' death and the function of ""holy war,"" we address Joshua through three major explanations for Israel's presence in Canaan: conquest, immigration, and internal revolt.

  • S01E13 The Book of Judges, Part I

    In essence a large type scene of apostasy, punishment, repentance, and rescue, Judges ultimately spirals into idolatry, rape, and near genocide. Yet this deep tragedy is leavened by high comedy, which this lecture introduces even as it raises historical, theological, and moral questions.

  • S01E14 The Book of Judges, Part II

    Returning to Gideon's son Abimelech and then introducing the tragic judges of Jephthah and Samson, this lecture unveils the increasing instability of the judge as political leader and the descent of Israel's tribal confederation into moral and political chaos.

  • S01E15 Samuel and Saul

    This lecture begins with Samuel, who represents the transition from charismatic leader to prophet, and then turns to the tragedy of King Saul to reveal the benefits and liabilities of monarchy.

  • S01E16 King David

    What is David's status in history? How does the complex story of his relationship with Bathsheba combine the personal and political while revealing his charm, his ruthlessness, and his faith?

  • S01E17 From King Solomon to Preclassical Prophecy

    Biblical prophets were known less for predicting the future than for communicating divine will, usually through poetry, and often in debate with kings and priests. This lecture focuses on the ""preclassical"" (nonwriting) prophets, particularly Elijah.

  • S01E18 The Prophets and the Fall of the North

    Amos and Hosea, the first two classical prophets whose words are preserved in the canon, offer poetic critiques of the government of Israel, the priesthood, and the rich. What followed from their warnings about both personal behavior and political machinations?

  • S01E19 The Southern Kingdom

    What was the context in which the major prophet Isaiah issues his oracles? How did the Southern Kingdom of Israel respond under its kings Hezekiah and Josiah?

  • S01E20 Babylonian Exile

    This lecture begins on the eve of the Exile, with the prophetic warnings of Jeremiah. It introduces the prophecies, narratives, and law by which the Judean exiles maintained their identity.

  • S01E21 Restoration and Theocracy

    What did the exiles find on their return from Babylon? How did these conditions lead to the breakdown of classical prophecy and an increasing concern with assimilation and intermarriage?

  • S01E22 Wisdom Literature

    Since the ""Sumerian Job"" of the 4th century B.C.E., authors have attempted to make sense of the world and our place in it. Biblical contributions to such ""wisdom literature"" range from the optimistic Song of Songs to the practical proverbs and the pessimistic Ecclesiastes. But the most famous, and most controversial, is the Book of Job.

  • S01E23 Life in the Diaspora

    The Babylonian Exile gave rise to the Diaspora ("dispersion") of the Judeans, now known as Jews. New questions of identity arose. The court tales of Esther and Daniel, like those of Joseph and Moses, gave answers at once humorous, macabre, and profound.

  • S01E24 Apocalyptic Literature

    What are the literary devices and sociological origins of apocalyptic writing? How are these typified by the Old Testament's only full-blown apocalyptic account (Daniel 7–12)? We conclude with a few comments on messianic speculation and future hope.