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       Harold B. Hunting

      Hebrew Life and Times

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664600226

       FOREWORD ToC

       CHAPTER I ToC

       CHAPTER II ToC

       CHAPTER III ToC

       CHAPTER IV ToC

       CHAPTER V ToC

       CHAPTER VI ToC

       CHAPTER VII ToC

       CHAPTER VIII ToC

       CHAPTER IX ToC

       CHAPTER X ToC

       CHAPTER XI ToC

       CHAPTER XII ToC

       CHAPTER XIII ToC

       CHAPTER XIV ToC

       CHAPTER XV ToC

       CHAPTER XVI ToC

       CHAPTER XVII ToC

       CHAPTER XVIII ToC

       CHAPTER XIX ToC

       CHAPTER XX ToC

       CHAPTER XXI ToC

       CHAPTER XXII ToC

       CHAPTER XXIII ToC

       CHAPTER XXIV ToC

       CHAPTER XXV ToC

       CHAPTER XXVI ToC

       CHAPTER XXVII ToC

       CHAPTER XXVIII ToC

       CHAPTER XXIX ToC

       CHAPTER XXX ToC

       CHAPTER XXXI ToC

       CHAPTER XXXII ToC

       REVIEW AND TEST QUESTIONS ToC

       A SHORT LIST OF BOOKS THROWING LIGHT ON HEBREW LIFE AND TIMES

       Table of Contents

      Most histories have been histories of kings and emperors. The daily life of the common people—their joys and sorrows, their hopes, achievements, and ideals—has been buried in oblivion. The historical narratives of the Bible are, indeed, to a great extent an exception to this rule. They tell us much about the everyday life of peasants and slaves. The Bible's chief heroes were not kings nor nobles. Its supreme Hero was a peasant workingman. But we have not always studied the Bible from this point of view. In this course we shall try to reconstruct for ourselves the story of the Hebrew people as an account of Hebrew shepherds, farmers, and such like: what oppressions they endured; how they were delivered; and above all what ideals of righteousness and truth and mercy they cherished, and how they came to think and feel about God. It makes little difference to us what particular idler at any particular time sat in the palace at Jerusalem sending forth tax-collectors to raise funds for his luxuries. It is of very great interest and concern to us if there were daughters like Ruth in the barley fields of Bethlehem, if shepherds tended their flocks in that same country who were so fine in heart and simple in faith that to them or their children visions of angels might appear telling of a Saviour of the world. On such as these, in this study, let us as far as possible fix our attention.

       Table of Contents

      SHEPHERDS ON THE BORDER OF THE DESERT

      Ancient Arabia is the home of that branch of the white race known as the Semitic. Here on the fertile fringes of well-watered land surrounding the great central desert lived the Phœnicians, the Assyrians, the Babylonians, and the Canaanites who, before the Hebrews, inhabited Palestine. So little intermixing of races has there been that the Arabs of to-day, like those of the time of Abraham, are Semites.

      The Hebrew people are an offshoot of this same Semitic group. They began their career as a tribe of shepherds on the border of the north Arabian desert. The Arab shepherds of to-day, still living in tents and wandering to and fro on the fringes of the settled territory of Palestine, or to the south and west of Bagdad, represent almost perfectly what the wandering Hebrew shepherds used to be.

      The Arabs of to-day are armed with rifles, whereas Abraham's warriors cut down their enemies with bronze swords. Otherwise,

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