101 Myths of the Bible
examines many of the most famous stories in the Old Testament and
shows the various influences that led to the writing. Among the
subjects explored are the earlier versions of many biblical stories
that were told among Israel's neighbors, the strong Egyptian
influences on many of the biblical accounts, and the internal
political and religious feuds in ancient Israel that led to various
propagandistic versions of earlier history.
Among the many revelations in
the book, we learn that:
●
Moses didn't write the Ten Commandments
● David
didn't kill Goliath
● Samson did
not pull down a Philistine temple
● Joshua
didn't bring down the walls of Jericho
● Sodom and
Gomorrah never existed
● Noah's ark
did not land on Mount Ararat
●
The story of Esther originally had nothing to
do with the Jews of Persia.
More Review Excerpts
This book will probably either
strengthen your faith or cast it into doubt. Just remember,
there’s a reason its called faith. At any rate, it will make for
lively dinner table discussions. - Spokesman Review.
In this controversial new book,
author Gary Greenberg offers insight into the meaning, origin and
accuracy of stories from the Old Testament. - Jewish Transcript.
Greenberg has obviously used
considerable research to find myths and legends that could parallel biblical
episodes . . . some of his comparisons create interesting
reading. - The Aniston Star.
Greenberg examines Old Testament
stories, reveals their contradictions and impossibilities,
demonstrates how the Bible may not be -- in fact, almost certainly
cannot be -- a literal record of history. It is, he argues, a
document shaped by its creators, based in myth and folklore, and
many of its most familiar events may not have happened. Noah's Ark,
for example, probably didn't land on Mount Ararat; Sodom
and Gomorrah did not actually exist; and it was King David's
bodyguard, not David himself, who slew the giant Goliath. An
illuminating reappraisal of the Bible. – David Pitt, bookloons
Recommended for larger religious
collections. - Library Journal.
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