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B.C. Flyover
The Bible before Christmas
The Ancient Stories
(Genesis 1–11)
God
God creates an ordered world that is beautiful and good.
Humanity
God creates humans to care for his world and represent him. Things go terribly wrong when humans believe a lie instead of truth and follow their own plans and desires. Sin enters the world. Sin spoils the world. Sin destroys the world. But God still loves his creation, especially humanity.
The Chosen Family
(Genesis 11–50)
Abraham and Sarah
God chooses two people to start a family that will grow into a nation (the Israelites) who will represent him and bless the world. Abraham and Sarah have a son, Isaac. Isaac and Rebekah have a son, Jacob.
Jacob has 12 sons. One is Judah. God promises the Messiah will come through Judah's family line. Another is Joseph (of the fancy coat). Joseph ends up in Egypt (because bad brothers), and eventually becomes second in command to Pharaoh (because God's providence).
The Chosen Nation
(Exodus–Judges)
Jacob, aka Israel
Jacob and his 11 other sons join Joseph in Egypt (because famine at home). Their descendants, the Israelites, become numerous and strong. The Egyptian king fears their growing population and power, so he enslaves them.
Moses
Moses, a son of Hebrew slaves who is raised in Pharoah's household, helps lead God’s people out of slavery into freedom. Things don’t go well (sin!). They wander in the wilderness for 40 years. They worship God in a tabernacle tent, led by priests.
Joshua
After Moses dies, Joshua leads the Israelites into a land God promised. They are identified by family clans, the 12 Tribes of Israel.
Judges
A series of strong leaders (male and female) rule and lead the Israelites.
The Monarch Nation
(1 & 2 Samuel)
Saul
The Israelites demand a human king so they can be “like other nations.” Saul is king #1. Starts out good. Ends bad because: sin. (He's from the tribe of Benjamin.)
David
Most famous of Israel’s kings. From the tribe of Judah. Poet. Musician. Giant-killer. But … sin.
Solomon
David’s son. Wealthy. Wise. Built a temple for the Lord. But … also sin. Lots of sin.
The Divided Nations
(1 & 2 Kings, 1 & 2 Chronicles, Prophets)
Lots more kings
After Solomon dies, Israel splits into two. Ten tribes become the northern nation called Israel (capital: Samaria). Two tribes are the southern kingdom called Judah (capital: Jerusalem). Both Israel and Judah have many generations of kings. A few follow God and lead well. But most rebel against God because … SIN.
The Fallen & Exiled Nations
(2 Kings 24–25, 2 Chronicles 32–36, Prophets)
Prophets
God speaks to both Israel and Judah through appointed human messengers, the prophets. They warn of God’s judgement (because: sin), remind of God’s care (because: love), and tell about a future Messiah who will rescue and restore God’s people (because: grace).
Enemies
A powerful enemy nation overthrows Israel. The people are exiled to Assyria, never to return home.
Later, another powerful enemy nation overthrows Judah. The temple is destroyed. Most of the people are exiled to Babylon. The people cry out to God for justice and rescue.
The Remnant Nation
(Ezra, Nehemiah, Prophets)
Frenemies
A super-power nation overthrows the powerful enemy that defeated Judah. That new king allows the exiled Jewish people to go back home and to rebuild their temple. But things are difficult and discouraging back in Judah. The people continue to cry out to God for justice and help. God promises that someday, a Messiah (a rescuer and King) would come to save his people, restore the temple, and establish a new kingdom.
The Occupied Nation
(Between the Old and New Testaments)
Tough Guys
World powers keep shifting. Judah is ruled by Persians, then Greeks, and finally Romans. The Jews still wait for the promised Messiah to rescue them from their enemies. They hope for a strong and mighty warrior who will defeat the Romans and then sit on a throne as king to rule his people. They wait 400 years. Waiting. Waiting. Waiting.
And then …
The Invaded World
(Matthew, Mark, Luke, John)
Jesus
He arrives — not as a mighty warrior on a battle stallion with spear and sword to defeat the enemy, but as a newborn human babe in a stable of animals, born into a humble family with no money, fame, or power.
He conquers — not with sword and spear, but with love and forgiveness and the ultimate sacrifice of his own life.
He reigns — not from an earthly throne of silver and gold, wearing a crown of jewels, but from heaven where he sits beside his Father, our God, after being raised back to life. He holds the world together, even when the world seems determined to destroy itself.
It didn’t happen how anyone expected, but the Messiah did come, as God promised, and not just for the defeated and discouraged people of Israel and Judah, but for the entire world.