We are excited to have guest blogger Jared Anderson present a series of posts on the history of the Bible. This brief series will first present a graphical overview of the history of the Jewish Scriptures followed by a narrative expansion, and then the New Testament will receive the same treatment. Jared welcomes your questions and comments at any point.

Before we divulge the timeline, following is a brief introduction of Jared so you know his merits.

Jared is finishing his Ph.D. in Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill under Bart Ehrman, focusing on the Gospels and New Testament. Jared received an Honors Bachelor of Arts from the University of Utah, where he majored in Middle Eastern Studies with an emphasis in Hebrew, as well as learning Greek and Latin under Margaret Toscano. His honors thesis explored Joseph Smith’s study and use of languages.

After graduating Magna cum Laude at the U of U, Jared completed his Master’s degree at UNC Chapel Hill with a thesis on the text of the Fourth Gospel in the writings of the third-century Church Father Origen of Alexandria. His dissertation will reconstruct and analyze the form of the Gospel of Mark used by the author of Matthew. Jared plans to write academic and popular books about the formation, transmission, and translation of the Bible, spreading awareness of how this fascinating and influential anthology came to be, as well as publish about the changing role of religion.

Jared currently teaches World Religions at Westminster College in Salt Lake City. He is very interested in promoting an open, progressive, and vibrant approach to religion in general and Mormonism in particular, and has presented papers on these topics. He is active on Mormon Stories, Mormon Matters, as well as participating on Mormon Expression, and is active on facebook groups such as Mormon Stories and MO 2.0. He welcomes friends and communication in those forums.

Jared and his wife Katrina live in Salt Lake City with their children: Olivia (12), Isaac (10), Grace (8), Asher (3) and Miriam (22 months). Jared is an active member in his ward.

Without further delay, here is the Old Testament timeline:

Jewish Literature
(According to Erich Zenger, Einleitung in das Alte Testament [4th ed.; Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 2001])

Note that most of these books draw from earlier sources

Text Date (BCE)
Song of Deborah (Judges 5) 1050-1000, or even 12th cent (Oxford Bible Commentary)
Song of Moses?  (Ex. 15) 11th or 12th cent BC?
Psalms earliest 12-10th century
Exodus 34 900
Elijah tales 9th cent
Amos and Hosea mid 8th cent.
1st Isaiah, Micah end 8th cent.
J and E* 900-722?
Core Deuteronomy (12-26) 622
Zephaniah, Nahum, Habakuk end 7th century
Joel end 7th/beg 6th? (Soggin)
Ezekiel, Jeremiah beg 6th cent
Deuteronomistic Hist (Joshua-2 Kings, rest of Deut) mid 6th cent
2nd Isaiah mid 6th cent
P, Haggai, Zechariah 520-518
Deuteronomistic Jeremiah c. 520
3rd Isaiah end 6th cent (Soggin)
Ruth 5th cent
Completion of Torah (the Jewish name for the first 5 books of the Jewish Bible) 400
Job 6th cent. (4th?)
Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, Tobit, Esther, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs 4rd-2nd cent.
12 prophets complete c.240
Psalms c. 200 (completed)
Jesus ben Sirach c. 175
Daniel c. 150 (167-165)
Judith 150-100
1-2 Maccabees c. 30
Wisdom of Solomon c. 100

*The dating of the elements in the Pentateuch is highly debated. Current scholarship questions whether the evidence allows us to postulate distinct sources J and E, suggests that the Priestly material looks more like a redactional layer than a source. In summary:

1) It is difficult to argue there was a “Yahwist Source” (J); instead we should speak of “Narrative Cycles”
2) Redactional work took several stops; most of this process was likely during/after the Deuteronomistic and Priestly stages
3) “P” should be seen not so much as a Priestly Source but a redactional layer (commentary or complement to older sources)So even though the DH is a great starting point, recent research has called key points into question. So the distinct older sources of the DH are gone, reduced to older traditions, and as far as dating goes, the end has become the beginning (with the Priestly source being one of the earlier steps instead of the last). D seems to have the most lasting power. I like Ska’s views of the Pentateuch coming together as a national epic necessitated by disputes after the Babylonian exiles returned to Judea post 539. (Ska, Introduction to Reading the Pentateuch [Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2006])

Information found in Jared’s post come from his online courses through the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Anyone can take these courses.  If you are interested, click here.

Born and raised in Northern California, Pablo received his education at Ricks College and BYU with a BA in Spanish, minor in PE Coaching. Pablo served his LDS mission during the years 94-96 in Rosario, Argentina. He now runs a skate shop and batting cages in Orem, UT. He's married and has 4 boys.

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