1,001 MORE Things You Always Wanted to Know About the Bible
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The Bible has inflamed the hearts of poets and martyrs, spawned revolutions and reformations, and influenced cultures and personal lives in sometimes small, sometimes dramatic ways. With a teacher's wit and knowledge, bestsellling author J. Stephen Lang again turns to the Bible and navigates more of its immense treasures in his easily accessible and informative style in 1,001 More Things You Always Wanted to Know About the Bible.
You will discover answers to the questions and curiosities you have always harbored about the Bible and its influence but perhaps felt you should already know. A joy to browse and reference, this fascinating book is sure to satisfy an inquirer's mind and spark further study of the Bible.
Test your knowledge of Bible trivia:
- In a famous folk legend, who found the "true cross" of Christ on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem?
- In 1952, what new Bible translation caused heated opposition?
- Who established Sunday as "The Lord's Day"?
- Who wore girdles in Bible times?
- What favorite children's song did Anna Bartlett Warner write?
- What is the "mercy seat"?
J. Stephen Lang
J. Stephen Lang is the author of the bestseller The Complete Book of Bible Trivia and sixteen other books, including 1,001 Things You Always Wanted to Know About the Bible and 1,001 Things You Always Wanted to Know About the Holy Spirit .
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1,001 MORE Things You Always Wanted to Know About the Bible - J. Stephen Lang
© 2001 by J. Stephen Lang
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Thomas Nelson, Inc., titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail SpecialMarkets@ThomasNelson.com.
Scripture quotations are from the NEW KING JAMES VERSION of the Bible. © 1979, 1980, 1982, Thomas Nelson, Inc., Publishers.
Scripture quotations noted KJV are from the Holy Bible, KING JAMES VERSION.
Scripture quotations noted NIV are from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION ®. © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Bible Publishing House. All rights reserved.
The NIV
and New International Version
trademarks are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by International Bible Society. Use of either trademark requires the permission of International Bible Society.
ISBN 978-1-59555-314-0
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
ISBN 978-0-7852-6790-4
Printed in the United States of America
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Also by J. Stephen Lang
from Thomas Nelson Publishers
1,001 Things You Always Wanted
to Know About the Bible
1,001 Things You Always Wanted
to Know About the Holy Spirit
1,001 Things You Always Wanted
to Know About
Angels, Demons, and the Afterlife
Contents
1. So Many Legends
2. The Bible Versus the Modern World
3. Moving Images: Films and Video
4. What the Famous Said
5. Customs of Christians
6. The Joys (and Woes) of Translating
7. Some Curious Beliefs and Practices
8. Back in the U.S.A.
9. Words and Phrases
10. Back to Nature
11. Daily Life in Bible Times
12. Digging Up the Bible
13. Reform and Revolution: The 1500s
14. The Amazing King James Version
15. Some Choice Tidbits: Old Testament
16. Some Choice Tidbits: New Testament
17. Songs and Music and Such
18. The Bible and the Jews
19. Potpourri, All Quite Interesting
Index
About the Author
1
So Many Legends
1. colored eggs at Easter
No, the Bible has nothing whatever to say about Easter eggs. But there is an old legend connected with Simon of Cyrene, the man forced by the Romans to carry Jesus’ cross to Calvary (Mark 15:21). Legend has it that Simon was an egg merchant, and when he returned from seeing the Crucifixion, he found that all the eggs in his produce basket had miraculously turned a variety of bright colors. In an alternate version of the story, his eggs did not take on their beautiful coloring until the day of Christ’s resurrection— Easter, that is.
2. King Arthur and the Last Supper table
There may have been a King Arthur in Britain’s distant past, but mostly he was pure legend. Arthur may have started out in the stories as a pagan chieftain, but eventually a lot of biblical imagery came to be associated with him. According to one legend, Arthur’s amazing spear (named Ron, believe it or not) was the spear used by the Roman soldier to pierce the side of Jesus on the cross. Another legend: Arthur’s sword Excalibur was the sword used to behead John the Baptist. And still another: the famous Round Table used by Arthur and his knights was actually the table used by Jesus and His disciples at the Last Supper.
3. the wandering Jew
One of the more somber legends connected with Christ is the old story that on His way to His crucifixion, He was heckled and slapped by a spiteful old Jew who told him to move along faster.
Christ replied, the story goes, by saying, I go, but you tarry until I come again.
Thus the surly Jew was doomed to walk the earth as a remorseful outcast until the second coming of Christ. In the story, widely spread in the Middle Ages and afterward, he is sometimes called Ahasuerus, sometimes Cartiphilus. In some versions of the story he was a servant of Pilate’s. In all versions, his punishment is seen as a symbol of the Jews’ rejecting Jesus as their Messiah. Wandering Jew
is best known to people today as the common name for Zebrina pendula, a popular garden vine.
4. the lion’s cubs
Many animals, such as cats, are born blind (or, more accurately, with their eyes closed). An old legend has it that lion cubs are actually born dead, but come to life on the third day when the father lion breathes life into them. Tradition makes this a symbol of Christ, who came to life after the third day in the grave.
5. the donkey’s cross
The donkey is a much-mentioned Bible creature, notable in the life of Jesus for being the beast that carried Him into Jerusalem. Some people discern a sort of crossshaped mark on the donkey’s shoulders, which is, they say, a symbol of having carried Christ.
6. robin redbreast
People have vivid imaginations. In answer to the question Why does the robin have a red breast?
folk wisdom came up with this answer: a robin picked a thorn from the crown of thorns on Jesus’ head, and a spurt of blood from Jesus dyed the bird’s breast red, which has remained so ever since.
7. why the aspen quakes
What wood was Jesus’ cross made of? No one knows. The lovely trees of the American West known as quaking aspens
are said to quake in shame because Jesus’ cross was made from aspen wood.
8. Judas and the redbud
According to legend the blossoms of the redbud tree are red (either from shame or from blood) because it is the tree on which Judas Iscariot hanged himself. (For the record, the tree’s flowers are really more lavender or pink than red.) The tree is the state tree of Oklahoma, and became so only after state forestry officials convinced ladies’ garden clubs that the redbud was not the tree Judas hung from (since it grows in America, not Israel).
9. the dogwood legend
People love the white and pink blossoms of the dogwood tree. The trees rarely grow to be more than twenty feet tall, and their branches spread more horizontally than vertically, making them a popular tree for lawns. Legend has it that in the past the dogwood grew as tall as the mighty oak, and its sturdy wood was used for the cross on which Jesus was crucified. After this, the tree (out of shame, some say) never again grew tall and straight but grew low, with narrow, twisting branches that could never be made into the beams of a cross.
10. the man in the moon
For centuries people have thought that the full moon resembles a human face, and many legends have sprung up about who the man in the moon
is. One legend that circulated widely was that he was the Israelite mentioned in Numbers 15:32–36: because he broke the law of Moses by gathering sticks on the Sabbath, he was stoned to death by the people. His forlorn face became the man in the moon.
11. no three kings
in the Bible
Nativity scenes usually depict the wise men (or Magi
) of Christmas as three kings, as does the popular song We Three Kings of Orient Are.
But this is legend, not the Bible. The story in Matthew’s gospel gives no hint that the wise men were kings, only that they were seeking the newborn king of the Jews,
that is, the baby Jesus. Later legend had it that they were kings themselves, paying their respects to a greater king than they. And, strictly speaking, the wise men don’t belong in the Nativity scene at all; they came later than the shepherds, when Joseph, Mary, and the baby were no longer in a stable but in a house (Matt. 2:11).
12. Lazarus’s second life
What became of Lazarus after Jesus raised him from the dead (John 11)? The Bible doesn’t say, but the people of the island of Cyprus have an idea: Lazarus became an evangelist and later became the island’s bishop. He is buried, tradition says, in the white limestone Church of St. Lazarus—his second grave. Over his tomb is the inscription Lazarus, a friend of Christ.
13. the Mar Thoma church
Legend has it that the apostle Thomas took the gospel all the way to India, founding what is called the Mar Thoma ( Thomas
) Church. Even if this isn’t true (and it probably isn’t), it is true that a Christian group has existed in India for many centuries. More probable is the tradition that around the year 345 a group of Syrian Christians settled in India, under the leadership of a man called Thomas of Cana.
14. Solomon and the Ethiopians
The Ethiopians have for centuries traced their rulers’ ancestry back to King Solomon of Israel. According to their legends, the queen of Sheba paid a visit to Solomon (see 1 Kings 10) and returned to her home country not only impressed with Solomon’s wisdom and his building projects (as the Bible says), but pregnant by him. Legend has it that the queen (named Makeda, though her name does not appear in the Bible) bore a son, Menelik, who at age twenty-two journeyed to Jerusalem to learn the Hebrew Scriptures, visit his wise father, and carry the true faith back to his homeland. Down to the twentieth century the Ethiopians insisted that all their rulers were descendants of Solomon and the queen of Sheba.
15. Orpah and Goliath?
In the book of Ruth, Orpah and Ruth are the two daughtersin-law of Naomi, whose husband and sons have died. Naomi told the two to return to their home in Moab, and while Orpah obeyed and parted tearfully, Ruth stayed with Naomi. Ruth, as the book tells us, later bore a child and became the great-grandmother of King David. According to Jewish legend, Orpah also had a famous descendant: Goliath the giant, who was slain by the shepherd boy David. In other words, when David faced Goliath, the two descendants of Ruth and Orpah were standing face-to-face. The legend further states that Orpah, after returning to Moab, became a harlot, thus Goliath and his giant brothers were the sons of prostitution.
16. creating the pig and cat
After spending so long afloat, wasn’t Noah’s ark a filthy place?The Bible says nothing about it, but logically it would have become pretty rank. According to an old Jewish legend, God created the pig to eat up food refuse. And because rats were becoming a problem (apparently the original two reproduced astoundingly), God created the cat to eliminate the rats.
17. Satan the winemaker
Genesis attributes the first making of wine to the righteous Noah (Gen. 9:20). Because of all the ills that have come from alcohol abuse, some Jews attributed Noah’s winemaking to Satan himself. According to the legend, Satan fertilized the grape vines with blood from a lamb, a lion, an ape, and a pig. The meaning of the four beasts’ blood: when drinking, a man becomes docile (the lamb), then fierce (the lion), then silly (the ape), and ends up wallowing in the mud (the pig).
18. British Israelites
What became of the ten lost tribes of Israel,
the northern tribes that were conquered by the Assyrians (2 Kings 17)? In the mid-1800s, it became a common (though silly) belief that some descendants of Israel’s royal house had settled in the British Isles, with England’s royalty being descended from Israel’s line. Following this line of thought, many of the Old Testament prophecies to Israel were actually fulfilled in the history of Britain. No scholars have ever taken these beliefs very seriously, and no church or sect has ever been founded based on the beliefs, but they have provided some amusement for more than a few people.
19. Awan
Genesis doesn’t tell us where Cain got his wife—which has led to much speculation, since at the time he took a wife, the only people on earth were Cain and his parents, Adam and Eve. The Jewish writing known as the book of Jubilees supplied an answer: Adam and Eve had a daughter named Awan, and Cain took her (his own sister) as his wife.
20. the crown of thorns, later
Medieval Christians prized relics connected with Jesus and the apostles—even though some of the relics were, we now know, obvious fakes. In 1238, King Louis IX of France was given what was supposed to be the crown of thorns placed on Jesus’ head. For centuries this supposed relic was housed in a specially built chapel in Paris, then later moved to the famous cathedral of Notre Dame there.An elaborate silver container with jewels housed the crown of thorns. It is still there, though now consists only of the plant stems, the thorns themselves being absent.
21. the spear that wounded Christ
John 19:34 reports that one of the Roman soldiers pierced the side of the crucified Jesus with a spear. Since it touched Christ, the spear was (in the minds of medieval Christians) a sacred relic. Supposedly that actual spear ended up centuries later in the city of Constantinople, and in 1492 the Ottoman ruler of Constantinople sent it to Pope Innocent VIII. The pope placed the spear’s shaft in one of the pillars supporting the dome of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. Was this the actual spear that pierced Jesus’ side? Doubtful, but a good story nonetheless.
22. the true cross
An old story—or legend—relates that Helena, mother of the Roman emperor Constantine, traveled to the Holy Land in 326 and there discovered the cross on which Jesus had died. The Catholic Church proceeded to disperse fragments of the true cross,
as it was called, which were worshiped as sacred relics in elaborate containers known as reliquaries. So many of the fragments—often no more than splinters—were around that in the 1500s Protestant leader John Calvin sneered that if all the splinters were put together, there would be enough wood to fill a large ship. Calvin and other Protestant leaders condemned the whole practice of relics, one reason being that so many were obviously fakes. However, many Catholic theologians defended the true cross and claimed that, through a miracle, the cross was able to multiply
itself far beyond the original wood that it contained.
2
The Bible Versus
the Modern World
THE CONFLICT WITH SCIENCE
23. divine creation vs. Darwin
According to intellectuals, the 1925 Scopes trial (also known as the monkey trial
) settled forever the question of whether the Bible was reliable as a science textbook.Technically, teacher John Scopes was found guilty for teaching evolution in his science class, but the worldwide audience that followed the trial felt that Scopes—and Darwin’s theory of evolution—won the day. But not so fast: in the 1990s some school boards began to modify their views on the subject. Scientists who take new findings seriously began to question whether Darwin was as wise as they thought.And Christians, not always willing to roll over and play dead when confronted with a secular worldview, had pressed for school systems to at least teach the possibility that God created the world (and not necessarily in six twenty-four-hour days, following Genesis 1). The battle is still on, a battle not just between religion and secularism, but between unbelievers and those who think the deep kernel of truth in Genesis 1 (that a personal God created the world with a purpose) is still deserving a hearing in our schools.
24. Butler’s Analogy
The bishop of Durham in England, Joseph Butler (1692–1752), was one of the best theologians of the 1700s. His most famous work was The Analogy of Religion, Natural and Revealed. Butler lived in an age when many people, particularly intellectuals, talked a lot about nature
and reason
and were more and more skeptical about the truths of the Bible. In his book Butler claimed that we could learn a lot from both nature and the Bible—and that one without the other was incomplete. Both—together—lead us to full truth, and those who think they can rely on nature and discard the Bible are simply wrong.
25. the comet man
Halley’s comet is named for English astronomer Edmund Halley (1656–1742). Like his friend and fellow scientist Isaac Newton, Halley saw no real conflict between science and faith. Halley had an interesting theory: the Great Flood in Genesis 7 was caused by a comet.
26. the rotund Mr. Chesterton
Journalist and author G. K. Chesterton (1874–1936) was a devout Catholic and frequent critic of secular society.Chesterton produced such still-read masterpieces as The Everlasting Man, Orthodoxy , and the popular Father Brown detective stories. Regarding the quarrel between religion and science, Chesterton wrote, Private theories about what the Bible ought to mean, and premature theories about what the world ought to mean, have met in loud and widely advertised controversy, especially in the Victorian time; and this clumsy collision of two very impatient forms of ignorance was known as the quarrel of Science and Religion.
Chesterton himself believed in the Bible, but he didn’t always believe in the wisdom of some of its defenders.
27. Benjamin Silliman
Here was a noble effort: try to reconcile the Bible with the findings of science. Silliman (1779–1864), a science professor at Yale, was also a devout Christian. He was disturbed that new findings in geology indicated that the earth was much, much older than Christians had ever believed. Silliman was one of the first to suggest that the six days
of creation in Genesis were not twenty-four-hour days but were actually ages.
28. Edward Hitchcock
The pupil of geologist Benjamin Silliman (see 27), Hitchcock felt certain that the findings of geology should not disturb Christians. In his book The Religion of Geology (1851), Hitchcock insisted that the great age of the earth was merely another illustration of God’s constancy and creative power.
29. Louis Agassiz
Not every scientist jumped on the evolution bandwagon after Charles Darwin published his Origin of Species in 1859. Darwin sent a copy to the most famous American scientist of the day, Louis Agassiz (1807–1873). He rejected just about everything Darwin said, and insisted that only a special creative act of God could account for the past and present world, including fossils. Agassiz took a curious view of Genesis, though: he said the account was true, but incomplete, for the Bible did not record every act of God’s creation, including His creation of other human races. Agassiz was, however, widely praised by many Christians as defender of traditional beliefs against the atheist Darwin.
30. Spencer the skeptic
Almost forgotten today, English philosopher Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) was widely read in his own day. He helped popularize the evolutionary views of Charles Darwin, and even applied them to human ethics and politics. (By the way, it was Spencer, not Darwin, who coined the phrase survival of the fittest.
) Thinking himself very scientific, Spencer (like many intellectuals then and today) believed that science had somehow disproved
the Bible and Christianity, and that what we call God
is really just an impersonal force or energy in the world. Spencer believed strongly in two things that are still typical of secular thinkers: life is perpetual progress, and science is the key instrument of progress.He didn’t foresee how science could be abused in places like Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia.
31. The Genesis of Species
Charles Darwin’s 1859 book The Origin of Species set the world on its ear. Christians generally reacted by rejecting it all together or, in some cases, by admitting that evolution might be somewhat true, but not totally. In 1871 a Catholic biologist, St. George Mivart, published The Genesis of Species. He argued that, scientifically speaking, evolution definitely did occur, but that Darwin’s theory of natural selection
could not account for it all. There had to be (and many Christians agreed with this) an Intelligence, indeed a Person, guiding the whole amazing process, and that Person was, of course, the God of the book of Genesis.
32. Henry Mansel
Can science answer all our questions? Many people asked that question in the 1800s, and still ask it today. One who tried to answer it was Henry Mansel (1820–1871), a Church of England minister and Oxford professor. In The Limits of Religious Thought, Mansel hammered home an old (but valid) idea: the human mind has its limits, and it should recognize those limits. If people have an inadequate conception of God, he said, that doesn’t mean that belief in God is impossible. We must recognize that there is mystery in God. According to Mansel we must also recognize what the Bible is intended to be: not a manual to answer all of humanity’s questions, but a way to regulate man’s moral and spiritual life. The Bible’s principles do not serve to satisfy the reason, but to guide the conduct.
In other words, the scientists and other skeptics are wrong to expect the Bible to satisfy all man’s doubts, for the Bible is intended to tell us how to love God and our neighbor.
33. polygenesis
It means many origins,
and it came into use in the 1800s as some so-called scientists put forward the idea that mankind did not have one ancestor but several. In other words, the old idea that all people descended from Adam was wrong, for there were several ancestors of humankind. The people who believed in this theory of polygenesis had found a convenient way to account for the differences in the races: obviously (they thought), white Americans and Europeans were descended from a superior ancestor, while Africans and others were descended from inferior stock. In other words, polygenesis was a perfect justification for treating some races worse than others.
Curiously, slaveholders in the South in the 1800s were appalled at this theory. While they tried to justify their holding of slaves (even when they were supposedly Christian), no slaveholder ever contended that blacks and whites had a different ancestor, for they believed all mankind was descended from Adam.
34. Paley’s Evidences
The 1700s, the Enlightenment era, put many Christians on the defensive as philosophers and scientists became skeptical about the truths of the Bible. One defender of traditional belief was English author William Paley, whose 1794 book Christian Evidences tried to show that the Bible was indeed reliable. His 1802 book Natural Theology contains his famous watchmaker analogy: if we find a watch, we must assume that some watchmaker designed and made it; thus, looking at the created world, we must assume that some wise Designer made it.
35. homo-brutalism
This word was coined by an American Jew, Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, to apply to the evolutionary teachings of Charles Darwin. Many Jewish leaders, as many Christian leaders, were extremely disturbed by Darwin’s teachings, believing they tore down people’s faith in the Bible. More than a few Jewish scholars wrote books attempting to prove that the Bible’s story of creation was true. Wise’s term homo-brutalism
refers to Darwin’s theory that man (homo) descended from animals (that is, the brutes).
THE LIBERAL-CONSERVATIVE BATTLE
36. Clarke’s transformation
The experience of William Newton Clarke (1840–1912) is a good illustration of what happened to many Christians in the late 1800s. Clarke, a Baptist pastor’s son, grew up trusting and loving the Bible, taking its truths at face value. But in the 1880s Clarke began to read about the biblical criticism coming out of European universities, and he had serious doubts about the truth of the Bible. He left his pastorate, taught at a seminary, and in 1898 published his Outline of Christian Theology, probably the first genuinely liberal book of theology in America. Clarke claimed he still believed the Bible was (in some way) inspired, but that it contained numerous errors. Caught up in the intellectual skepticism of his time, Clarke claimed that the average Christian could not interpret the Bible properly (after all, they might take it at face value, as he himself had once done). Thus Christians needed guides—intellectuals, professors, skeptical scholars like himself—to help them read and understand the Bible. He was a typical example of liberal snobbery, an elitist believing that the ignorant Christians in the pews simply could not understand the Bible without the professionals’
help.
37. Chapter and Verse
Author Mike Bryan, a professed agnostic, did a curious thing: he enrolled in Criswell College, an extremely conservative Southern Baptist college in Dallas, to find out if Bible-believing Christians were as horrible as he thought. To his surprise, he liked them, and they treated him with warmth and kindness. His 1991 book, Chapter and Verse, has the subtitle A Skeptic Revisits Christianity. After his stay at Criswell, Bryan is still a skeptic, but one with a fresh respect for Christians who take the Bible seriously. The title, of course, comes from conservative Christians’ habit of backing up their beliefs with specific quotes from the Bible—chapter and verse.
38. Fosdick the great liberal
Harry Emerson Fosdick (1878–1969) was one of America’s most famous preachers, and also a noted liberal. In 1922 he preached a famous sermon, Shall the Fundamentalists Win?
in which he criticized conservative Christians. He took the typical liberal view that fundamentalism was an embarrassment to Christianity, and that intelligent believers could not hold to the traditional view of the Bible. So in 1924 he published The Modern Use of the Bible. In that book he insisted that the heart of the Bible is its reproducible experiences. The spirit and quality of Jesus were meant to be reproduced in its followers. In the New Testament, the Master’s life, like music, was meant to be reproduced.
Does that sound liberal? Hardly. Fosdick held to a high moral standard, one reason that some people referred to him as an evangelical liberal.
39. Bishop Robinson, less liberal than before
The poster child
for liberal Christianity in the 1960s was probably John A. T. Robinson, an English bishop who penned the popular (and very controversial) book Honest to God, which made it clear that Robinson was anything but a traditional Christian. In that notorious book and in other writings, the bishop was clearly a skeptic about the Bible, particularly the New Testament, which he believed was written not by people who had known Jesus but by people living more than a century later. But in the 1970s Robinson had a change of heart. Digging into the Bible deeply, Robinson became convinced that all of the New Testament had been written before the year 70—in other words, completed within forty years of Jesus’ earthly life. His book Redating the New Testament publicized his findings.
40. the Jesus Seminar
Because Christianity is composed of hundreds and even thousands of different denominations and groups, no one, and no official body,
can speak for all Christians.This is certainly true for the infamous Jesus Seminar, a group of notoriously liberal academics who have taken on the task of reading the New Testament and deciding which parts are real and which aren’t. Of course, individuals (Thomas Jefferson, for example) have been doing this for centuries—the old process of throwing out the parts of the Bible we happen not to like. But in our media age, the Jesus Seminar has apparently relished playing the role of Christian skeptics,
people claiming to be Christian but extremely doubtful if much