Old Testament, Chapter by Chapter
We work through one Old Testament chapter each day, covering all 929 chapters in three years!
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Judges 1, An Incomplete Conquest
Monday, June 22, 2026
Joshua 24, Death of Joshua
Joshua repeats God's past actions and stresses that they have been given the land with little of their own toil and sweat. After being saved from Egypt, they have been able to move into this land, into cities they did not build.
One hundred and ten was the historically "ideal" age of death in Egypt.
(NIV footnotes: In verse 30 Timnath Serah is also known as Timnath Heres (see Judges 2:9) In verse 32, the Hebrew is literally a hundred kesitahs; a kesitah was a unit of money of unknown weight and value.)
Sunday, June 21, 2026
Complete Chaos, An Introduction to Judges
As described in this Bible Project video, the book of Judges is very disturbing. The point of this disturbing book is that when the Israelites moved away from submission to YHWH and absorbed the idols and morals of the people around them, their nation deteriorated. This is emphasized in a sequence of downhill spirals of idolatry, oppression, repentance, deliverance and renewal, followed later by idolatry.
Problems and Questions
In addition to the repeated violence of the book, a number of questions arise in the study of the text. One of these is the dating of events. This issue with dates goes back to the Exodus -- one has to make different date assumptions depending on whether one has an early or a late date for the Exodus from Egypt and those dates depend on how precisely one interprets time periods such as "forty years". Is "forty years" sometimes used to mean a generation or a similarly long period of time? And do some of these time periods overlap?
A similar problem arises with the Old Testament use of large numbers. At times an extremely large number of people are reported killed in a battle. For example, according to Judges 12:6, forty two thousand Ephraimites are killed in a dispute between Jepthah of Gilead and the tribe of Benjamin. If the NIV translation of the text is accurate then not only is this fight a massive battle larger than any in the American Civil War, but the Ephraimite dead exceed the total population of that tribe as given a generation or two previously in Numbers 26:37. Similar examples abound in this book -- and also in subsequent Old Testament histories such as the book of Samuel or Kings. Some of these problems challenge our understanding of the ancient Hebrew. I will try to devote a Sunday essay to this.
Resources and References
My practice is to read through the text from the New International Version (NIV), copied into the blog and italicized in blue. At the head of each blue paragraph of text I place a short title; after the text I place my thoughts or comments in black. I begin this process with my own reactions and thoughts and then supplement these comments with gleanings from a commentary or two.
The real goal of this blog is to force me to read every verse thoughtfully. My comments are part of that process, creating a certain accountability for me in this study. I hope that you, too, read the passages thoughtfully! Feel free to disagree -- or to react in other ways! I place hyperlinks in pink, created so that one can click on a link and see the linked site open in another window... and go down a rabbit hole if one wishes!
(I also send out these posts on Substack. The colors blue and pink used in the blogposts does not carry through to the Substack posts.)
- The New International Commentary on the Old Testament (published by Eerdmans) has a commentary on Judges by Barry Webb. I have that on my Kindle. (This the same series of commentaries that has Hubbard's beautiful commentary on Ruth.)
- I have also used a commentary by Herbert Wolf found in the third volume of the Expositor's Bible Commentary.
- The Gospel Coalition has a free ten-week online class (ten separate printed lectures) on the book.
- There is an extensive written summary at a biblestudytools.com website.
- Another summary, a shorter one, is at this Crossways.org website.
- There is an Agape Catholic Bible Study here.
- There is an inductive study (a study led by questions) here.
- A study from Thru the Bible with J. Vernon McGee (from the 1990s) is available here.
- A study, apparently from Matthias Media, is available here as a pdf download. It includes this map (from Wikipedia) of the presumed possessions of Israel at the start of the time of the Judges.
Saturday, June 20, 2026
Joshua 23, Joshua's Epitaph
Friday, June 19, 2026
Joshua 22, An Altar at Geliloth
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Joshua 21, Levite Inheritance
The distribution of the land has been made for the tribes. Now we need to make sure the Levites have places to live.
We see described the precise towns for various Levite clans. The land requirements for Levite families in each town is described in Numbers 35:1-5 and comes out to about a square kilometer of land.
The anticipated result now is "rest on every side" -- the Israelites have literally taken over the promised land and so have the Promised Rest that YHWH gives them. This ending, with its emphasis on rest, echoes the last sentence in Joshua 14:15, where the land distributions of Caleb were previously described.
