Outline Studies in the Old Testament for Bible Teachers. Jesse Lyman Hurlbut

Outline Studies in the Old Testament for Bible Teachers - Jesse Lyman Hurlbut


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       Jesse Lyman Hurlbut

      Outline Studies in the Old Testament for Bible Teachers

      Published by Good Press, 2021

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664622655

       SECOND STUDY

       THIRD STUDY

       FOURTH STUDY

       FIFTH STUDY

       SIXTH STUDY

       SEVENTH STUDY

       EIGHTH STUDY

       NINTH STUDY

       TENTH STUDY

       ELEVENTH STUDY

       TWELFTH STUDY

       THIRTEENTH STUDY

       FOURTEENTH STUDY

       FIFTEENTH STUDY

       SIXTEENTH STUDY

       SEVENTEENTH STUDY

      The Old Testament World

      The Bible is primarily a book of history, and without some knowledge of its historical contents no one can rightly understand its revelation of divine truth. But in order to know the history contained in the Old Testament we must obtain a view of the lands in which that history was wrought. We therefore study first of all the Old Testament World.

      I. Location and Extent. The history of the Old Testament was enacted upon a field less than half the area of the United States. It extended from the river Nile to the lands east of the Per´sian Gulf and from the northern part of the Red Sea to the southern part of the Cas´pi-an. The world of Old Testament history was thus 1,400 miles long from east to west and 900 miles wide from north to south, and it aggregated 1,110,000 square miles, exclusive of large bodies of water.

      II. Let us begin the construction of the map by drawing upon its borders Six Seas, four of which are named in the Old Testament.

      1. The Cas´pi-an Sea, of which only the southern portion appears in the northeastern corner of our map.

      2. The Per´sian Gulf, south of the Cas´pi-an, on the southeast.

      3. The Red Sea, on the southwest (Exod. 15. 4; Num. 33. 10; 1 Kings 9. 26).

      4. The Med-i-ter-ra´ne-an Sea, on the central west. Note its names in Josh. 1. 4 and Deut. 34. 2.

      5. The Dead Sea, north of the eastern arm of the Red Sea (Gen. 14. 3; Deut. 4. 49; Joel 2. 20; Ezek. 47. 18).

      6. Lake Chin´ne-reth (ch pronounced as k), the name in the Old Testament for the Sea of Gal´i-lee (Num. 34. 11; Josh. 13. 27).

      III. Next we indicate the Mountain Ranges, most of which, though important as boundaries, are not named in the Bible.

      1. We find the nucleus of the mountain system in Mount Ar´a-rat, a range in the central north (Gen. 8. 4). From this great range three great rivers rise and four mountain chains branch forth.

      2. The Cas´pi-an Range extends from Ar´a-rat eastward around the southern shore of the Cas´pi-an Sea.

      3. The Za´gros Range extends from Ar´a-rat southeasterly to the Per´sian Gulf, which it follows on the eastern border.

      4. The Leb´a-non Range extends from Ar´a-rat in a southwesterly direction toward the Red Sea. Mount Her´mon, the mountain region of Pal´es-tine, Mount Se´ir, on the south of the Dead Sea, and even Mount Si´nai, all belong to this chain (Deut. 3. 25; Josh. 13. 5; 1 Kings 5. 6).

      5. The Tau´rus Range, from Ar´a-rat westward, following the northern shore of the Med-i-ter-ra´ne-an.

      IV. The Rivers, for the most part, follow the lines of the mountain ranges.

      1. The A-rax´es, from Ar´a-rat eastward into the Cas´pi-an Sea, may be taken as the northern boundary of the Old Testament world.

      2. The Ti´gris, called in the Bible Hid´de-kel, flows from Ar´a-rat, on the southwestern slope of the Za´gros mountains, in a southeasterly direction into the Per´sian Gulf (Gen. 2. 14; Dan. 10. 4).

      3. The Eu-phra´tes, the great river of the Bible world, rises on the northern slope of Ar´a-rat, flows westward to the Tau´rus, then southward, following Leb´a-non, then southeasterly through the great plain, and finally unites with the Ti´gris (Gen. 2. 14; 15. 18; Josh. 1. 4; 24. 2).

      4. The Jor´dan flows between two parallel chains of the Leb´a-non range southward into the Dead Sea (Gen. 13. 10; Num. 22. 1; Judg. 8. 4).

      5. The Nile, in Af´ri-ca, flows northward into the Med-i-ter-ra´ne-an Sea (Gen. 41. 1; Exod. 2. 2).

      V. The Old Testament world has three Natural Divisions, somewhat analogous to those of the United States.

      1. The Eastern Slope, from the Za´gros mountains eastward to the great desert.

      2. The Central Plain, between the Za´gros and Leb´a-non mountains, the larger portion a desert.

      3. The Western Slope, between Leb´a-non and the Med-i-ter-ra´ne-an Sea.

      VI. We arrange the Lands according to the natural divisions, giving locations, and not boundaries, as these changed in every age.

      1. On the eastern slope lie:

      1.) Ar-me´ni-a (Rev. Ver., "Ar´a-rat"), between Mount Ar´a-rat and the Cas´pi-an Sea (2 Kings 19. 37).

      2.) Me´di-a, south of the Cas´pi-an Sea (2 Kings 17. 6; Isa. 21. 2).

      3.) Per´sia, south of Me´di-a and north of the Per´sian Gulf (Ezra 1. 1; Dan. 5. 28).

      2. In the central plain we find:

      (a)


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