The Bible’s Assemblies and Offices Based on Greek Institutions?

Russell Gmirkin continues to argue for much of the Old Testament having been written as late as around 270 BCE in his new book, Plato and the Creation of the Hebrew Bible. (He first made the argument in Berossus and Genesis, Manetho and Exodus, – link is to archived posts addressing various points in that work.) The … Continue reading “The Bible’s Assemblies and Offices Based on Greek Institutions?”


ARCHIVES by TOPIC, Annotated (Updated 2 March 23)

On this page are links to archives of posts treated in special depth. In Depth Archives   The Kennedy Assassination, Interview: Billionaire Logic and the Death of JFK   Historical Methods (with reference to the study of Christian Origins/Historicity of Jesus)   Book of Revelation — Annotated List of Posts   Nazareth   Death and … Continue readingARCHIVES by TOPIC, Annotated (Updated 2 March 23)”


New Understandings of the Old Testament: Jacques Cazeaux

This post is a continuation of a protracted series on the views of Philippe Wajdenbaum whose doctoral thesis, arguing that a good many of the Biblical stories and laws were inspired by Greek literature, has been published as Argonauts of the Desert: Structural Analysis of the Hebrew Bible. Several of the more recent posts have … Continue reading “New Understandings of the Old Testament: Jacques Cazeaux”