Artwork for podcast Bible805, Lessons and commentary to help you know, trust, apply, and teach the Bible
#6 Truth & History, Lesson Five: Apocrypha: Overview and Historical Anchors, in this case, lack thereof
24th September 2020 • Bible805, Lessons and commentary to help you know, trust, apply, and teach the Bible • Yvon Prehn
00:00:00 00:29:48

Share Episode

Shownotes

 If the Bible is supposed to be historically accurate, what about the books some Bibles have in between the Old Testament and New Testament?

Are they historically reliable? Why aren’t they in all Bibles?

Today we’ll answer those questions in this podcast.

In our last lesson we looked at how the Old Testament is tied to real history and real geography.

This week we’ll look at the Apocrypha to see if it meets the same tests. We’ll look at what it is and how it came about.

As you’ll see it’s part of a bigger story that includes a history of the Septuagint—more than a scholarly term, this was the Bible of Jesus and Paul—a Greek translation of the Old Testament that was translated about the same time as the Apocrypha. But we can’t confuse the two because the Septuagint is a translation of the Old Testament from Hebrew to Greek and the books of the Apocrypha are not considered divinely inspired because the reasons we cover in the podcast.

Images of some explanatory slides, are on the Bible 805 website at: https://wp.me/pazrJD-2g

Links

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube