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Undoing Conquest: Ancient Israel, the Bible, and the Future of Christianity

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Archeologists in the last century unearthed new evidence of the origins of the Hebrew people that reshapes understandings of Israelite history and the Bible. Undoing Conquest recovers the Highland Settlements material evidence as a history that challenges the theological imagination of conquest that is still present in Christianity today. Yet this new history remains largely untold outside of specialized archeological and biblical studies contexts. Undoing Conquest analyzes this evidence from a feminist perspective in dialogue with the present moment and uncovers its importance for shaping Christian theology and church practice today. The book examines how the biblical conquest narratives shaped Christian ideology, which justified settler-colonialism and genocide around the globe like the European conquest of the Americas. It proposes ways to invite the Highland Settlements story into the life of the church by creating a new liturgical season called the Season of Origins, focused on repairing the harms of the past and creating a more just future.

208 pages, Paperback

Published February 21, 2024

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Kate Common

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Janelle Hooper.
38 reviews1 follower
May 5, 2025
Groundbreaking and life changing. Academic yet accessible. A must read for understanding faith origins.
Profile Image for Enoch Page.
33 reviews2 followers
May 5, 2025
New evidence of how the Hebrew people came to exist challenges our understanding of their history as conveyed in the Bible. Undoing Conquest demystifies the biblical origin story of the Hebrew people by reporting on archaeological findings unearthed about seventy years ago. Material artifacts gathered from the Highland Settlements site provide evidence of tangible history that contradicts the imagined theological narrative of the Hebrew conquest and victory in Canaan, which is still reproduced in Christianity today. The excavation and analysis of hundreds of ancient villages in Israel and Palestine illuminate the Highland Settlement communities, whose mainly peaceful members were indigenous primarily to Canaan and constructed a conquest narrative to forge a common identity and shape their destiny as God’s chosen people—Israel. The dominance of the biblical story and the challenges of conveying the historical implications of scientific research to the public explain why this new Hebrew history remains largely untold. Compiling a narrative from the new evidence that counters the biblical conquest story has ignited contentious debates among archaeological and biblical studies scholars and between objective analysts and believers. Undoing Conquest examines the evidence of the Highlands Settlement through a feminist lens, shedding new light on the historical narrative. Kate Common, the author, places the new historical facts in dialogue with a misconstrued biblical Exodus story that became central to Jewish identity formation and Christian identity. The book demonstrates how the heroic scriptural conquest narrative, featuring Hebrew refugees driven by God to kill and displace occupants of the promised land in Canaan, has shaped Western and particularly Christian conquest ideology. Common explains how this conquest narrative has justified settler-colonialism and genocide around the globe, including the European conquest of the Americas. She encourages Westerners to embrace the Highland Settlements story as a more accurate narrative that can heal past wounds and revitalize religious traditions mired in a mythical history contradicted by evidence. If Christians accepted her appeal to embrace the Highland Settlement story, Common seems convinced it could reshape Christian theology and the practices of churchgoers today. To achieve that goal, she encourages Christians and other believers in the Abrahamic tradition to establish a new liturgy in their annual sacred calendars that she calls the Season of Origins. In honor of the Highland Settlement occupants who came to identify as Hebrews, Common asserts that the proposed liturgical practices she outlines would help repair past harms while envisioning and creating a far more just future. Common overlooks how her proposed liturgy seeks to interrogate conquest and inculcate social justice in Christians. At the same time, she continues the idea that only biblical Hebrews influenced Christianity, despite studies showing that Egyptian theology also contributed significant concepts to Christian beliefs.
Profile Image for Jazmine Lawrence.
78 reviews1 follower
June 8, 2025
Wow. Kate Common gracefully gathers archeological challenges to the Old Testament’s historicity and points to their value to Christian faith rather than their threat. This significantly helped lessen my own sense of being threatened by these challenges and feel more comfortable with archeological evidence being unearthed. I’m left feeling open to further archeological discoveries and acknowledging the limits of what we have.

For such a good challenge to Israel’s narrative of conquest, there’s a gap left in ecclesial implementation: Common provides liturgical suggestions, but more pastoral care and guidance is needed to help hearts let go of popular hermeneutical and exegetical methods that hold into the conquest narrative. The value of Scripture in the form we have it may need some triage after reading Common so as to not leave it for dead, especially in light of Jesus using those same scriptures to nevertheless create a liberating counter-narrative in his own context. Also missing is how to still distill the authentic witness of God’s work among this people group from what’s been written, whose experiences of God we can expect would have been no less than those people have today of God through Jesus.

Even if Common was light on this, she offers a powerful conversation partner with other books to eventually make this perspective fruitful for the church’s mission of inviting the world into following Jesus.

Profile Image for lily.
65 reviews
August 25, 2025
2.5 ⭐, rounded down. should have EITHER been a book about how the highland settlements change the way we think about the conquest narrative in joshua--and how that SHOULD affect the way we think about israel's theological claim to palestine--OR been an article about just the way the highland settlements change the way we think about the conquest narrative in joshua.

common's call to rethink joshua's conquest narrative--especially in light of the way it has historically been employed to pillage and massacre indigenous peoples by european christians--is a well-intentioned and morally correct, but the absence of any mention of the ongoing genocide in palestine is a glaring one.

this is a repetitive book that has good things to say but ultimately--in my eyes--falls short of its goal, undermining itself by avoiding mentioning one of the most obvious and tragic effects of the longevity and perceived legitimacy of biblical conquest narratives.
33 reviews
June 8, 2025
An accessible introduction to the Highland Settlements - the precursors of ancient Israelites. Common does a great job at walking readers through the implications of this archaeological discovery on church practice and religious imagination. For Common, the archaeology challenges the violence within the book of Joshua and, in the process, opens up a more liberating origin story for modern readers. She concludes with helpful and imaginative suggestions of how to work new discoveries into the communal life and practice of the church.
Profile Image for Jeremy Garber.
328 reviews
February 18, 2025
Kate Common provides a subtly revolutionary look at how archeology changes our understanding of Scripture – and how it can impact Christians today. Archeologists have uncovered evidence that the Hebrew people did not originate in a violent military conquest (a la the book of Joshua), but instead were a nonviolent egalitarian community that withdrew from imperial Egyptian occupation, driven by climate change. Common connects this reality with our view of Scriptural authority and how Christians have used to justify conquest and oppression globally and throughout history. Common then provides a new season of the liturgical year, situated in October, that will help congregants remember the true story of the Highland settlers and the community that Jesus calls Christians to represent – one of peace, social justice, and inclusion. Our congregation is planning to institute the Season of Origins from Common’s book this October, and I look forward to the rich conversations and Christian discipling that will result.
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