Colleen M. Conway

A Contemporary Introduction to the Bible


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This is an area of rocky hills that eventually rise up to 3000 feet. This hill country is where most of Israelite history took place. It is drier and less accessible than the coastal plain to the west. The third strip is the Jordan Valley, encompassing the Dead Sea, Jordan River, and Sea of Galilee (from south to north). This is one of the lowest places on earth, about 1000 feet below sea level, and – aside from some oases – it is very dry and barren. The fourth strip is the Transjordanian Plateau, including Edom, Moab, Ammon, and the Gilead region (where Israelites settled). This plateau, now in the contemporary nation of Jordan, has similar characteristics to the central highlands of Israel. To the east of it (and off the map) lies the desert.

A map of Israel and its surrounding. The Mediterranean Sea is on the West and the Desert on the East. The Dead Sea is in the South and the Sea of Galilee is in the North. The Jordan River runs in middle.

      MAP 1.1 The land of Israel and its surroundings. Redrawn from Adrian Curtis (ed.), Oxford Bible Atlas (4th edition). Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.

      Visualizing (the Possible Ancestors of) Ancient Israelites

Ancient Egyptian illustrations show people with hunting tools and animals, walking from West to East.

      FIGURE 1.1 Ancient visitors to Egypt from the East (Canaanites?).

      On the far right of the picture there is a clean-shaven Egyptian with darker brown skin. The visitors from the east (Canaan?) are the six figures to the left of him. They have lighter brown skin, beards, and some colorful tunics. One thing such images make clear is that the people who dwelled east of Egypt looked more like the contemporary inhabitants of the Middle East and Africa than the light-skinned inhabitants of North America and Europe. Indeed, not only were ancient Israelites non-white, but the ancient world lacked an exact correlate to modern concepts of race.

A map shows the main route, major Highway and sea route of the ancient Near East. The major route starts at On in the West to UR in the East, through Hazor, Damascus, Tadmor, Mari, Accad, and Babylon.

      MAP 1.2 The major routes of the ancient Near East. Note how the major routes move from Egypt on the left through Judah/Israel near the Mediterranean to Syria and Mesopotamia to the northeast and east. Redrawn from Yohanan Aharoni and Michael Avi-Yonah (eds.), The Macmillan Bible Atlas (revised edition). New York, Macmillan, 1977, map 9.

      Major Periods in the Biblical Drama

      The major turns in biblical history can be seen in this context. The Egyptian empire dominated the area of ancient Israel from around 1450 to 1200 BCE, the years when many scholars think the biblical exodus may have happened. Then a series of catastrophes ended Egyptian rule over the area and inaugurated a power vacuum in the land of Israel. This is when we first see identifiable archaeological evidence of a “people of Israel.” This people settled in small villages in the hill country of Judah and Israel during the pre-state tribal period (1250–1000 BCE, including the time of the chieftain, Saul). At the outset of the first millennium (BCE), David and Solomon established what might be termed a proto-monarchy in Jerusalem that ruled the Israelite tribes for several decades (around 1000–930 BCE). In the later ninth century, the tribes of Israel formed a