The God of the Exiles

In the middle centuries of the first millennium BCE, the Hebrew peoples experienced a series of blows that drastically transformed how they understood themselves and their relationship with God. First, the fall of the kingdom of Israel to the Neo-Assyrian Empire, which created an influx of well-educated YHWH-worshiping refugees into the kingdom of Judah, and … Continue reading The God of the Exiles

The God of the Prophets

One of the most important things we need to remember about the Bible is that it is a library, not a book. And like any library worth its salt, the Bible contains different perspectives within it (while, yes, telling an overarching story). This is especially true of the Old Testament, where we see theological debates … Continue reading The God of the Prophets

The God of the Historians

While they say history is written by the victors, sometimes it’s written by the survivors — people trying to understand and contextualize what has happened to their people. This seems to be the case with the mysterious group of historians known to scholars as the Deuteronomists, whose hands are all over the books of Deuteronomy, … Continue reading The God of the Historians

The God of the Kingdom(s)

Last time, we looked at early Israel’s charismatic theocracy, in which Israel was a loose confederation of tribes united by faith, language, and heritage, but who were largely left to their own local governance. In times of national crisis, God would raise up a leader who could rally the tribes to the cause. But, as … Continue reading The God of the Kingdom(s)

The God of the Twelve Tribes

This series explores the way the relationship between God and ‘God’s people’ changes and evolves throughout the Scriptures. Last time, we saw how Moses marked a transition away from Abraham’s personal (but also private) relationship to a new kind of relationship, marked by the characteristics Integral theorists refer to as the ‘red’ mythical-literal meme: warring … Continue reading The God of the Twelve Tribes