Ouça e leia

Entre em um mundo infinito de histórias

  • Ler e ouvir tanto quanto você quiser
  • Com mais de 500.000 títulos
  • Títulos exclusivos + Storytel Originals
  • 7 dias de teste gratuito, depois R$19,90/mês
  • Fácil de cancelar a qualquer momento
Assine agora
br bdp devices
Cover for The Old Testament: Complete

The Old Testament: Complete

1 Avaliações

5

Séries

1 de 15

Duração
53H 4m
Idioma
Inglês
Formato
Categoria

Religião & Espiritualidade

The Old Testament is a collection of thirty-nine books about the history and religion of the people of Israel. The authors of these books are unknown, and each book possesses a unique tone, style, and message. Individually, they include stories, laws, and sayings that are intended to function as models of religious and ethical conduct. Together—through hundreds of characters and detailed events—they represent a unified narrative about God and his attempt to relate to humankind by relating to a specific group of people.

The Old Testament contains four main sections: the Pentateuch, the Former Prophets (or Historical Books), the Writings, and the Latter Prophets. This study guide covers books from the first three sections.

The Pentateuch

The Pentateuch comprises the first five books of the Old Testament. It depicts a series of beginnings—the beginning of the world, of humankind, and of God’s promise to the Israelites.

Genesis, the first book, opens with God’s creation of the world. The perfect world falls into evil when humans disobey God, and the human population divides into separate nations and languages. After many generations, God speaks to a man named Abraham. God makes a promise, or covenant, with Abraham to make his descendants into a great nation and to give them a great land. Abraham shows strong faith in God, and God seals his promise with a number of signs and tests. This special covenant with God passes on to Abraham’s son, Isaac, and to his grandson, Jacob. Together, they represent the patriarchs, or fathers, of the Israelite people. Jacob’s twelve sons move to Egypt after the youngest brother, Joseph, miraculously becomes a high official in Egypt.

In the Book of Exodus, the descendants of Jacob’s children have become a vast people, but the Pharaoh of Egypt holds them in slavery. God chooses one man, Moses, to rescue the Israelites. God sends ten plagues to Egypt, and, with miraculous signs and wonders, Moses leads the people out of Egypt and across the Red Sea. They go to Mount Sinai, where God appears in a cloud of thunder over the mountain and affirms to the Israelites the promise he made to Abraham. God commands them to worship only himself, and he gives them various ethical and religious laws.

The books of Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy continue the explanation of God’s religious laws and his promises to the people. The people must keep these laws to enter and enjoy the promised land, toward which they are heading. Despite God’s presence, the Israelites complain and disobey incessantly, inciting God’s wrath. They wander the wilderness for forty years in search of the promised land. These books continue the period of Moses’s legendary leadership and miracles, until his death at the end of Deuteronomy.

The Former Prophets

The Former Prophets, or the Historical Books, cover the history of the Israelites from Moses’s death to the fall of the nation in 587 B.C. In the books of Joshua and Judges, the Israelites successfully conquer the land promised to them by God, but they disobey God by worshipping the deities of the surrounding peoples. Neighboring nations invade and oppress the Israelites. God saves the people of Israel by designating judges, or rulers, to lead the people in warding off their enemies.

The two books of Samuel (First Samuel and Second Samuel) cover the rise of the united kingdom of Israel. Israel’s religious leader, Samuel, appoints a king named Saul. Saul disobeys God, however, and God chooses another man, David, to be Israel’s king. King Saul attempts to kill the young David, but fails. Saul’s death closes the first book. In the second book, David establishes the great kingdom of Israel. He conquers Israel’s surrounding enemies and establishes Jerusalem as the religious and political center of Israel.

The books of Kings (called 1 Kings and 2 Kings) trace the decline of Israel’s success. God blesses David’s son, Solomon, with immense wisdom. As king, Solomon expands Israel into an empire and builds a great temple in Jerusalem. Solomon disobeys God by worshipping other deities, and, at his death, the kingdom splits into a northern kingdom, Israel, and a southern kingdom, Judah. A host of evil kings leads the two kingdoms away from worshipping God. Despite the attempts of the prophets Elijah and Elisha to halt Israel’s wrongdoing, the two kingdoms fall to the Assyrian and Babylonian Empires. Jerusalem is destroyed, and the people are sent into exile.

The Writings

The Writings are placed after the historical books in the Christian Bible. Some of these are narratives covering the time of Israel’s exile in other nations and its eventual return to the homeland. The Book of Esther, for example, tells the story of an unassuming Jewish girl who becomes the queen of Persia and boldly saves the Jewish people from genocide.

Many of the Writings are books of poetry and wisdom, among the most important literature in the Old Testament. The Book of Job is a lengthy dialogue investigating God’s justice and the problem of human suffering. The Psalms are lyrical poems and hymns—many attributed to King David—that express humankind’s longing for God. The books of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes—similarly attributed to the wise King Solomon—offer sayings and instructions about the meaning of life and ethical behavior. Lastly, the Song of Solomon (also attributed to Solomon) is a romantic, lyric dialogue between a young woman and her lover.

© 2016 Whitestone Media (Audiolivro): 9781909908727

Data de lançamento

Audiolivro: 1 de novembro de 2016

Tags

    Outros também usufruíram...

    1. Matthew
      Matthew Christopher Glyn
    2. The Liturgical Year
      The Liturgical Year Richard Fragomeni
    3. Understanding Spiritual Gifts
      Understanding Spiritual Gifts Sam Storms
    4. Cicero's Brutus
      Cicero's Brutus Cicero
    5. Categories
      Categories Aristotle
    6. Alexander the Great: General, Leader, God?
      Alexander the Great: General, Leader, God? Christopher M. Bellitto
    7. Sophist
      Sophist Plato
    8. Phaedrus
      Phaedrus Plato
    9. Alexander the Great: The True Story of the Life & Time of the Ancient Military Leader
      Alexander the Great: The True Story of the Life & Time of the Ancient Military Leader Liam Dale
    10. I, Columbus: My Journal 1492-1493
      I, Columbus: My Journal 1492-1493 Peter Roop
    11. Plutarch's Lives Volume 1
      Plutarch's Lives Volume 1 Plutarch
    12. Philebus
      Philebus Plato
    13. Orthodoxy
      Orthodoxy G. K. Chesterton
    14. The Great Mathematicians: [Fully Illustrated]
      The Great Mathematicians: [Fully Illustrated] Raymond Flood, Robin Wilson
    15. Lady Frederick: A Comedy in Three Acts
      Lady Frederick: A Comedy in Three Acts William Somerset Maugham
    16. The Cathedral
      The Cathedral Joris-Karl Huysmans
    17. The Complete Writings (Oxford World's Classics)
      The Complete Writings (Oxford World's Classics) Zhuangzi
    18. On the Nature of the Gods
      On the Nature of the Gods Cicero
    19. Exodus
      Exodus Christopher Glyn
    20. Ion
      Ion Plato
    21. Euthydemus
      Euthydemus Plato
    22. On the Motion of Animals
      On the Motion of Animals Aristotle
    23. Every Moment Holy
      Every Moment Holy Douglas Kaine McKelvey
    24. Laches
      Laches Plato
    25. Cratylus
      Cratylus Plato
    26. Don Juan
      Don Juan Lord Byron
    27. Proposed Roads to Freedom
      Proposed Roads to Freedom Bertrand Russell
    28. The Prophet and Other Stories (Unabridged)
      The Prophet and Other Stories (Unabridged) Khalil Gibran
    29. The Narrative Spirituality of Dante’s Divine Comedy
      The Narrative Spirituality of Dante’s Divine Comedy Sebastian Mahfood
    30. The Explorer: A Melodrama In Four Acts
      The Explorer: A Melodrama In Four Acts William Somerset Maugham
    31. A Man of Honour: A Tragedy In Four Acts
      A Man of Honour: A Tragedy In Four Acts William Somerset Maugham
    32. The White Bull
      The White Bull Voltaire
    33. Prayers of Hope, Peace, and Protection
      Prayers of Hope, Peace, and Protection Abraham Lincoln, George Dawson, William Temple
    34. On the Commonwealth
      On the Commonwealth Cicero
    35. The Complete Old Testament
      The Complete Old Testament Christopher Glyn
    36. A Theologico-Political Treatise
      A Theologico-Political Treatise Benedict Spinoza
    37. The Everlasting People: G.K. Chesterton and the First Nations
      The Everlasting People: G.K. Chesterton and the First Nations Matthew J Milliner
    38. George MacDonald
      George MacDonald C. S. Lewis