Full disclosure: I am a Christian who admires Jews, respects Judaism, and loves Israel. I believe that God inspired the Bible, but He did not dictate it. The Old Testament, which I shall call “The Jewish Bible,” and the Apocrypha were written by Jews. All or most of the New Testament was written by people we would recognize as Messianic Jews. Anyone who has known and liked as many Jews as I have, knows that they love to argue, and often disagree. I am intrigued by contradictions in the Bible. They do not disturb my faith.
The Jewish Study Bible, Second Edition, includes a modern translation of the Jewish Bible, and extensive commentary. Indeed, the commentary is at least twice as long as the Jewish Bible itself. There are introductions to each Biblical book, side commentary to each book, and essays following the Jewish Bible.
I have read all of the side commentary, but you do not really need to. Do read the introductory essays, and the essays that follow the Jewish Bible.
The essays occasionally mention the Documentary Hypothesis without really explaining it. The Documentary Hypothesis claims that the first five books of the Bible, which the Jews call the Torah, were not written by Moses, as Fundamentalists believe; they were originally four other documents that were eventually combined, perhaps by Ezrah.
An excellent explanation of the Documentary Hypothesis can be found in Richard Elliott Friedman’s book Who Wrote The Bible.
I respect Jewish and Christian Fundamentalists. I think they have a better understanding of human nature than secular humanists. I am not a Fundamentalist, and approach the Bible with what can be called, for lack of a better term, “the higher criticism.” I believe in the Documentary Hypothesis; I believe in evolution. I do not believe that Jonah spent several days in the stomach of a large fish.
I have read the Bible eleven times in ten English translations. I previously read the Jewish Study Bible, First Edition.
Whenever I read a new translation of the Bible I notice different things. This time I noticed that Biblical Judaism, although many contemporary Jews disagree, does not assert posthumous rewards for good behavior. Every soul goes to Shoel after death. Shoel is described as a gloomy place, somewhat like a child’s image of an old, large, slightly run down, spooky cemetery that is full of ghosts.
In Shoel one is as likely to run into Adolf Hitler as to a Jewish philanthropist who attended synagogue services every Sabboth.
Nevertheless, morality is important for two reasons. First, if the Israelites collectively obey the laws in the Torah they will win victory over their enemies. Otherwise, they will not.
Second, good people become prosperous; bad people do not.
The high point of political Israel was the Empire pf David. Under King David’s leadership, the Israelites conquered the land promised to them in Genesis 15:18 “On that day the Lord made a covenant with Abram, saying ‘To your offspring I assign this land, from the River of Egypt to the great river Euphrates’.” The River of Eghpt was not the Nile; it was a river that separated the Sinai Peninsula from Southern Israel.
The Israelites did not conquer the Philistines. They ended the possibility that the Philistines would conquer them. They did conquer Syria and three nations in what is now Jordan: the Ammonites, the Moabites, and the Edomites.
The Empire of David began to decline soon after his death. David’s son Solomon spent so much of the national wealth on his harem and his luxuries that the Israelite Army lacked the resources to continue the subjugation of Syria, which became independent.
David’s son Rehoboam make a foolish mistake that provoked the independence of the northern tribes. The Northern Kingdom and the Southern kingdom could not hold onto Ammon, Moab, and Edom. They became independent.
The Empire of Assyria conquered and displaced the inhabitants of the Northern Kingdom and crushed a revolt lead by the king of the southern kingdom, Hezekiah.
The Assyrian Empire was destroyed by an alliance of Babylonia and Mede. The destruction of Assyria was celebrated in the Jewish Bible book of Nahum.
These celebrations were short lived, because Babylonia conquered the Southern Kingdom. In his prophetic book, Jerimiah wrote that the Israelites should accept Babylonian dominance. The Israelites revolted. The Babylonians crushed the revolt, destroyed the Temple of Jerusalem, and beginning the Babylonian captivity.
From a secular standpoint one can blame the decline and fall of David’s Empire on mistakes made by David’s successors. The time to fight Assyria was not when Assyrian power was strongest; it was to help Babylonia and Media when Asyria was vulnerable.
The prophets blamed three causes for the decline and fall of David’s Empire. First, the Israelites worshiped other gods than Yahweh, and they worshiped Yahweh improperly. The Law of Moses, also known as the Torah, decreed that animal sacrifices were only to be given in the Temple of Jerusalem.
Second, Israel’s rich were oppressing Israel’s poor. Third, many Israelites were unchaste.
Cyrus the Great conquered the Babylonians, ended the Babylonian Captivity, and encouraged the Israelites to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the Temple of Jerusalem. For this Cyrus gets much good ink in the Old Testament.
In his essay “Concepts of Purity in the Bible” Jonathan Klawans misses the main point about the difference between what is clean and unclean.
First, an unclean act can be any sexual activity other than between a husband and wife when the wife is most likely to conceive. This may not seem like a good idea now when the planet is over populated. Nevertheless, Israel was a small nation surrounded by enemies and frequently at war. Israel needed a high birth rate to make up for losses on the battlefield.
Second, an act is unclean if it can spread disease. This is most obvious in the prohibition against eating pigs. All carnivorous animals ae forbidden because they can get parasites from eating other carnivorous animals.
Those with skin disease are to keep away from everyone else. Human waste is to be deposited outside of the camp. People must wash their hands before eating.
Since the end of the Jewish Bible the Children of Israel have suffered many tragedies. Fortunately, they have outlived and out fought their enemies. Today the nation of Israel thrives. The Jews have become the most accomplished 0.2% of the human population.
I recommend The Jewish Study Bible Second Edition for anyone of any religious faith, or no religion at all, who wants a thorough education in the Jewish Bible and in Judaism.