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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:08,490 --> 00:00:13,590 This time on The Bible Rules, we will lead you back thousands of years to 2 00:00:13,590 --> 00:00:15,690 ancient practices from the shocking. 3 00:00:16,850 --> 00:00:19,070 The reality, well, it happens. 4 00:00:20,790 --> 00:00:21,830 To the unusual. 5 00:00:22,070 --> 00:00:24,430 It turns out that the God of Israel likes barbecue. 6 00:00:25,390 --> 00:00:27,870 We'll discover the perils of being a tourist. 7 00:00:28,110 --> 00:00:30,790 When you travel, you are in great danger. 8 00:00:31,390 --> 00:00:33,910 The dire consequences of idol worship. 9 00:00:34,350 --> 00:00:37,710 Moral of the story, do not worship golden idols. 10 00:00:42,000 --> 00:00:44,260 What was the ancient world really like? 11 00:00:45,600 --> 00:00:50,040 The answer may be hidden in thousands of rules and commandments in the Bible. 12 00:00:50,500 --> 00:00:51,760 Some are shocking. 13 00:00:52,080 --> 00:00:53,220 Some mysterious. 14 00:00:53,820 --> 00:00:57,400 All reveal lost details about the world that was. 15 00:00:57,800 --> 00:00:59,360 The past is now. 16 00:01:07,560 --> 00:01:10,600 The Bible. The world's best -selling book. 17 00:01:10,990 --> 00:01:15,370 Everyone's heard of its Ten Commandments, but it actually contains 18 00:01:15,370 --> 00:01:16,990 laws, rules, and commands. 19 00:01:17,670 --> 00:01:22,210 These were the rules its authors lived by, and they provide an unexpected 20 00:01:22,210 --> 00:01:23,370 to the ancient path. 21 00:01:24,470 --> 00:01:27,470 In biblical times, the world could be a chaotic place. 22 00:01:27,790 --> 00:01:31,190 Communing with the gods was a means by which people made sense of life's 23 00:01:31,190 --> 00:01:33,770 mysteries, creating order amidst the chaos. 24 00:01:34,130 --> 00:01:38,870 Our first Bible rule concerns an essential spiritual tool for 25 00:01:38,870 --> 00:01:39,870 the divine. 26 00:01:39,960 --> 00:01:44,000 A tool not just for the Israelites, but also for many other ancient cultures. 27 00:01:44,760 --> 00:01:51,420 Altars. The altar was the most direct conduit to God. It was a place that 28 00:01:51,420 --> 00:01:54,220 you were able to share a meal with him. 29 00:01:54,700 --> 00:01:58,560 And the altar of the Hebrew God had to be built according to very specific 30 00:01:58,560 --> 00:01:59,560 instructions. 31 00:02:01,340 --> 00:02:05,260 But if you make for me an altar of stone, do not build it of hewn stones. 32 00:02:05,620 --> 00:02:08,580 For if you use a chisel upon it, you profane it. 33 00:02:10,030 --> 00:02:14,650 You shall not go up by steps to my altar, so that your nakedness may not be 34 00:02:14,650 --> 00:02:15,650 exposed on it. 35 00:02:16,650 --> 00:02:20,630 In other words, if you're going to make an altar out of stone, don't make it out 36 00:02:20,630 --> 00:02:21,589 of cut stones. 37 00:02:21,590 --> 00:02:25,770 And also, don't walk up the altar, because your private parts would then be 38 00:02:25,770 --> 00:02:26,790 visible to the steps. 39 00:02:27,530 --> 00:02:31,470 The first thing this rule reveals is that the ancient Israelites didn't wear 40 00:02:31,470 --> 00:02:32,870 underwear beneath their tunic. 41 00:02:33,690 --> 00:02:37,810 But why would a brief flash of naked flesh have been considered offensive to 42 00:02:37,810 --> 00:02:38,810 God? 43 00:02:38,910 --> 00:02:44,390 We see over and over again that the things that defile the holy have to do 44 00:02:44,390 --> 00:02:46,690 sex and have to do with death. 45 00:02:47,770 --> 00:02:53,350 And in the case of exposed genitals of the priest, it may simply be that it's 46 00:02:53,350 --> 00:02:57,590 considered inappropriate, too closely related to sex in a space that's been 47 00:02:57,590 --> 00:02:58,990 aside for the sacred. 48 00:02:59,850 --> 00:03:04,590 So, no naked bodies or exposed genitals in a holy environment, not even for the 49 00:03:04,590 --> 00:03:05,590 briefest of seconds. 50 00:03:05,930 --> 00:03:07,730 But what about these hewn stones? 51 00:03:08,320 --> 00:03:10,040 which basically means any carved stone. 52 00:03:10,660 --> 00:03:14,380 Why did the Bible specifically want uncarved stones for altars? 53 00:03:15,020 --> 00:03:18,140 Surprisingly, the answer may be related to warfare. 54 00:03:19,500 --> 00:03:25,460 The problem with taking a chisel to a stone that will be used as an altar is 55 00:03:25,460 --> 00:03:30,520 that the chisel would be made of iron, and because it's a metal used in 56 00:03:30,520 --> 00:03:34,040 and in warfare, it's inappropriate for use for holy vessels. 57 00:03:34,860 --> 00:03:38,800 But while the design specs of a Hebrew altar were unique, their function was 58 00:03:38,800 --> 00:03:42,820 not. In fact, altars were prolific throughout the ancient world. 59 00:03:43,120 --> 00:03:47,480 When you're talking about finding altars archaeologically, they do come in all 60 00:03:47,480 --> 00:03:52,720 shapes and sizes. And you do have them in all places. You know, roadside 61 00:03:52,820 --> 00:03:57,120 altars in houses, altars in shrines, altars in temples. 62 00:03:59,240 --> 00:04:03,500 But just how were other ancient cultures using altars to worship their gods? 63 00:04:04,240 --> 00:04:07,340 An altar is where you perform a sacrifice. 64 00:04:08,280 --> 00:04:15,000 It would have a flat surface on which you could sacrifice either an animal or 65 00:04:15,000 --> 00:04:20,100 cakes, wine, honey, whatever the offering was going to be. 66 00:04:21,260 --> 00:04:24,700 While the altars of the Bible differed in design from others in the ancient 67 00:04:24,700 --> 00:04:28,440 world, they still served as the primary vehicle for Israelites to communicate 68 00:04:28,440 --> 00:04:29,419 with their God. 69 00:04:29,420 --> 00:04:33,280 And just like their neighbors, they not only prayed on their altar, they used it 70 00:04:33,280 --> 00:04:34,159 as a grill. 71 00:04:34,160 --> 00:04:39,340 You're supposed to cut up the meat to offer to God, and then you burn it on 72 00:04:39,340 --> 00:04:41,060 altar, and the smell goes up to him. 73 00:04:41,420 --> 00:04:43,820 It turns out that the God of Israel likes barbecue. 74 00:04:44,760 --> 00:04:49,420 He likes the smell of roasting meat. He likes the crackling fat on the fire. 75 00:04:51,310 --> 00:04:55,030 The ancients believed that butchering animals at the altar gave them a direct 76 00:04:55,030 --> 00:04:59,330 line of contact to the divine. However, this was not the only way that people 77 00:04:59,330 --> 00:05:00,710 communicated with their gods. 78 00:05:01,150 --> 00:05:05,550 Outside of Israel, and most notably in Greece, there were specific people who 79 00:05:05,550 --> 00:05:07,530 served as divine portals to the gods. 80 00:05:07,750 --> 00:05:13,690 They were called oracles. The oracle functioned as a seat of wisdom. 81 00:05:14,350 --> 00:05:17,830 and a kind of transmission point between mortals and the gods. 82 00:05:18,070 --> 00:05:22,710 There were oracles all over the ancient world, from Egypt to Assyria to Greece, 83 00:05:22,730 --> 00:05:25,330 and belief in them stretched back millennia. 84 00:05:25,850 --> 00:05:27,030 Oracles are fascinating. 85 00:05:27,290 --> 00:05:31,850 They seem so foreign to us. People always wonder, how was that viable? 86 00:05:32,070 --> 00:05:34,530 How were they not discredited by just being false? 87 00:05:35,390 --> 00:05:38,950 For a small fee, people could go to an oracle and ask for insight about their 88 00:05:38,950 --> 00:05:39,950 lives and future. 89 00:05:40,270 --> 00:05:44,890 Questions like, should I become a farmer, or is my slave stealing from me? 90 00:05:44,890 --> 00:05:45,890 they would be answered. 91 00:05:46,130 --> 00:05:48,570 But there was a process to get your question in. 92 00:05:48,910 --> 00:05:53,390 These are big operations, and so you have a hierarchy and a bureaucracy. 93 00:05:54,130 --> 00:05:58,690 You've got priests, you've got sub -priests. You have to go and get a 94 00:05:58,690 --> 00:06:00,470 to have your question presented. 95 00:06:03,820 --> 00:06:07,620 Once your question was put to the Oracle, she would have a vision in 96 00:06:09,880 --> 00:06:15,060 A recent discovery at the Shrine of Delphi, located in central Greece, has 97 00:06:15,060 --> 00:06:19,260 scientists to speculate that these visions may have even had a basis in 98 00:06:19,260 --> 00:06:20,260 reality. 99 00:06:21,020 --> 00:06:27,440 Delphi, we've recently discovered in 2002 that there was a hidden fault, 100 00:06:27,680 --> 00:06:32,880 or two, I think, faults that meet underneath the temple. And we have 101 00:06:32,920 --> 00:06:37,280 therefore, for the release of gases, possibly methane, which would be 102 00:06:37,280 --> 00:06:42,960 hallucinogenic. So it's so satisfying for the modern mind to assume that 103 00:06:42,960 --> 00:06:46,080 a chemical basis for the vision. 104 00:06:47,310 --> 00:06:51,030 After receiving her vision, the Oracle would provide an answer to the 105 00:06:51,030 --> 00:06:52,070 petitioner's question. 106 00:06:52,330 --> 00:06:55,790 But sometimes those answers could be misinterpreted. 107 00:06:58,770 --> 00:07:01,130 The year is 546 B .C. 108 00:07:01,510 --> 00:07:03,150 The place, the kingdom of Lydia. 109 00:07:03,610 --> 00:07:08,090 King Croesus of Lydia is worried about a rival king, Cyrus of Persia, 110 00:07:08,190 --> 00:07:09,250 threatening his kingdom. 111 00:07:09,470 --> 00:07:14,690 He consults an Oracle and asks if he should invade Persia and take Cyrus head 112 00:07:14,690 --> 00:07:19,460 on. The Oracle replies, If you do so, you will destroy a great empire. 113 00:07:19,780 --> 00:07:24,660 And this is a good example because of the ambiguity of the reply. 114 00:07:27,900 --> 00:07:31,540 And so he assumes that he's going to destroy a great empire, but it turns out 115 00:07:31,540 --> 00:07:33,460 that that great empire is his own. 116 00:07:35,320 --> 00:07:39,060 Croesus misinterprets the Oracle's prediction to devastating effect. 117 00:07:39,380 --> 00:07:42,720 He goes to war with Persia and loses his own kingdom. 118 00:07:46,890 --> 00:07:51,370 Oracle could be ambiguous, and it's a good thing they were, because if they're 119 00:07:51,370 --> 00:07:52,530 ambiguous, then they're never wrong. 120 00:07:53,630 --> 00:07:57,290 The gods neither tell the truth nor tell lies. 121 00:07:57,550 --> 00:07:59,070 They speak in signs. 122 00:07:59,310 --> 00:08:03,470 They tell us things that leave us in the position still to interpret. 123 00:08:05,610 --> 00:08:10,230 Whether through oracles or altars, man's attempt to communicate with God often 124 00:08:10,230 --> 00:08:13,710 provided ambiguous answers, allowing room for interpretation. 125 00:08:14,540 --> 00:08:18,600 But while some divine messages are mysterious, many Bible commands are so 126 00:08:18,600 --> 00:08:22,980 specific that their message is hard to miss, like this next one, which leads 127 00:08:22,980 --> 00:08:24,060 little to the imagination. 128 00:08:26,540 --> 00:08:30,740 If a woman approaches any animal and has sexual relations with it, you shall 129 00:08:30,740 --> 00:08:32,360 kill the woman and the animal. 130 00:08:33,720 --> 00:08:35,200 They shall be put to death. 131 00:08:35,419 --> 00:08:37,000 Their blood is upon them. 132 00:08:39,559 --> 00:08:42,480 In other words, women cannot have sex with animals. 133 00:08:43,230 --> 00:08:46,250 And if anyone catches a woman doing it, she should be killed. 134 00:08:47,710 --> 00:08:48,730 The animal, too. 135 00:08:49,270 --> 00:08:53,430 But was bestiality so prevalent in the ancient world that the Bible needed to 136 00:08:53,430 --> 00:08:54,430 have a rule about it? 137 00:09:00,410 --> 00:09:03,730 It doesn't mean that it was widely practiced. It just means that there's a 138 00:09:03,730 --> 00:09:07,290 preventing people from practicing it. There's one other ancient law collection 139 00:09:07,290 --> 00:09:12,070 that has a lot of prohibitions on sex with animals, and that is the Hittite 140 00:09:12,070 --> 00:09:16,660 laws. There's a great big passage about exactly which animals you can't have sex 141 00:09:16,660 --> 00:09:19,440 with and the terrible punishments that happen if you do. 142 00:09:19,900 --> 00:09:23,880 Other than that, ancient law collections don't seem to care. 143 00:09:24,820 --> 00:09:28,440 So why did the Israelites feel they needed to lay this law down? 144 00:09:29,180 --> 00:09:33,740 Bestiality, well, you know, it happens. We know it happens. But it's not really 145 00:09:33,740 --> 00:09:34,960 the path we want to follow. 146 00:09:35,480 --> 00:09:39,740 It's setting a boundary between what's acceptable sexual practice and what 147 00:09:39,740 --> 00:09:40,740 isn't. 148 00:09:42,540 --> 00:09:47,180 And for the Israelites, bestiality certainly lay outside the bounds of 149 00:09:47,260 --> 00:09:52,000 But as we'll discover elsewhere in the ancient world, it was regarded a little 150 00:09:52,000 --> 00:09:57,000 differently. These are the figures who also engage in sex with donkeys. 151 00:10:01,260 --> 00:10:05,280 The Bible rules open a portal on the ancient world and the traditions and 152 00:10:05,280 --> 00:10:06,460 practices of its people. 153 00:10:06,990 --> 00:10:11,430 Many rules still resonate with us today, but others hint at behavior which we 154 00:10:11,430 --> 00:10:13,350 might find more unusual. 155 00:10:14,090 --> 00:10:17,490 Bestiality is clearly a matter that the writers of the Bible did not take 156 00:10:17,490 --> 00:10:21,370 lightly. But do we have any evidence that it was actually practiced in the 157 00:10:21,370 --> 00:10:22,370 ancient world? 158 00:10:24,270 --> 00:10:28,010 There were certainly stories from Greece suggesting that bestiality was on the 159 00:10:28,010 --> 00:10:32,710 ancient mind. In one legend, Circe, a goddess of magic, transforms a few 160 00:10:32,710 --> 00:10:37,150 unsuspecting Greeks into pigs. And their king, Odysseus, wants to save them and 161 00:10:37,150 --> 00:10:42,450 turn them back into human form. And the pig argues, you human beings, you screw 162 00:10:42,450 --> 00:10:43,450 anything. 163 00:10:43,850 --> 00:10:48,470 But you'll never find an animal wanting to sleep with a human being unless it's 164 00:10:48,470 --> 00:10:49,229 been forced. 165 00:10:49,230 --> 00:10:53,290 Most animals would be embarrassed by the amount of sex that human beings have. 166 00:10:55,700 --> 00:11:00,600 We have sex when the female is not ovulating. We have sex when she's 167 00:11:00,600 --> 00:11:05,740 pregnant. We have sex when she's lactating. We have sex when women are 168 00:11:05,740 --> 00:11:09,640 postmenopausal. In our case, it's not focused on reproduction at all. 169 00:11:09,680 --> 00:11:13,340 Reproduction is an occasional byproduct of human sexual interaction. 170 00:11:13,840 --> 00:11:18,260 The Greeks recognized the existence of bestiality, but they considered it the 171 00:11:18,260 --> 00:11:20,900 bad habit of a particular mythological being. 172 00:11:21,420 --> 00:11:25,120 Satyrs, for example, right? Part man, part beast. They always have 173 00:11:25,120 --> 00:11:30,220 disproportionately huge phalluses. And these are the figures who also engage in 174 00:11:30,220 --> 00:11:32,660 sex with donkeys and so on. 175 00:11:34,160 --> 00:11:38,900 So, what's appropriate for an especially well -endowed half man, half beast is 176 00:11:38,900 --> 00:11:40,680 not appropriate for a human being. 177 00:11:41,670 --> 00:11:47,830 Seders are the very embodiment of man and beast, and they represent the 178 00:11:47,830 --> 00:11:54,450 unacceptable, the extreme, the indulgence of impulses well beyond the 179 00:11:54,450 --> 00:11:56,690 Greek moderation and control. 180 00:11:59,550 --> 00:12:03,870 Yet is there another level to this rule? Another reason why it may have been 181 00:12:03,870 --> 00:12:09,380 written? Tuberculosis, influenza, smallpox, all these things came from 182 00:12:09,380 --> 00:12:13,780 domesticated animals living in close proximity to human beings. The diseases 183 00:12:13,780 --> 00:12:17,920 that were particularly harsh on people like the Israelites who were wandering 184 00:12:17,920 --> 00:12:22,560 around were diseases that had what we call an animal reservoir, which is to 185 00:12:22,560 --> 00:12:26,400 say... If humans didn't have it, the animals could carry it. And if you're 186 00:12:26,400 --> 00:12:29,880 talking about diseases that don't get transferred primarily human to human, 187 00:12:30,000 --> 00:12:35,660 which would be typhoid, certainly trichinosa, then you're talking about 188 00:12:35,660 --> 00:12:38,560 that humans are getting from the animals that they live with. 189 00:12:38,800 --> 00:12:43,520 One last possibility. This Bible rule, as many others, may have been written to 190 00:12:43,520 --> 00:12:47,460 emphasize the difference between the Israelites and other ancient peoples who 191 00:12:47,460 --> 00:12:48,960 did practice bestiality. 192 00:12:49,630 --> 00:12:53,630 Through this law, the Israelites are setting themselves apart from the 193 00:12:53,630 --> 00:12:54,790 of neighboring cultures. 194 00:12:55,030 --> 00:12:59,530 And this next rule underscores just how much the Hebrew God disapproved of the 195 00:12:59,530 --> 00:13:00,890 customs of Israel's neighbors. 196 00:13:01,150 --> 00:13:03,250 The portal is about to open again. 197 00:13:05,310 --> 00:13:09,550 You shall not make for yourself an idol. You shall not bow down to them or 198 00:13:09,550 --> 00:13:12,570 worship them. For I, the Lord, am a jealous God. 199 00:13:14,190 --> 00:13:18,770 In other words, don't pray to any statue or image, whatever it may depict or 200 00:13:18,770 --> 00:13:19,770 form it may take. 201 00:13:20,290 --> 00:13:23,750 I am your one true God, and you are only to worship me. 202 00:13:24,190 --> 00:13:28,230 Before we can decode this Bible rule, we need to answer a few questions. 203 00:13:29,110 --> 00:13:31,650 What actually was an idol in the ancient world? 204 00:13:32,390 --> 00:13:35,450 And if the Israelites weren't worshiping them, who was? 205 00:13:36,830 --> 00:13:40,290 We can think of an idol as... 206 00:13:41,040 --> 00:13:45,420 A statue? It comes from a Greek word meaning an image. Idols were sometimes 207 00:13:45,420 --> 00:13:52,260 models of the way they imagined a god acting. There were idols of war gods 208 00:13:52,260 --> 00:13:58,780 like Baal, who was raising his club or spear to strike someone with. They had 209 00:13:58,780 --> 00:14:03,880 details painted onto them. Evidence suggests that certain images felt 210 00:14:03,880 --> 00:14:08,520 real to those who saw them. So real, they could inspire a physical response. 211 00:14:09,120 --> 00:14:12,080 The eyes were important because you wanted to be able to make eye contact 212 00:14:12,080 --> 00:14:16,540 it often. Just as you look at the gods, the gods are looking at you through 213 00:14:16,540 --> 00:14:17,540 those eyes. 214 00:14:20,660 --> 00:14:25,360 Right across the ancient world, from Canaan to Greece to Rome, Egypt or 215 00:14:25,660 --> 00:14:27,660 people worshipped many different gods. 216 00:14:27,960 --> 00:14:32,100 For every sphere of life, war, love, death. 217 00:14:32,970 --> 00:14:36,730 There were different gods who needed to be worshipped and appeased. And if you 218 00:14:36,730 --> 00:14:41,310 wanted to summon the presence of a specific god, you took some wood or 219 00:14:41,310 --> 00:14:42,310 made a statue. 220 00:14:42,550 --> 00:14:45,750 So were the statues themselves worshipped as gods? 221 00:14:46,210 --> 00:14:51,070 So what did the Greeks, well the Romans, think when they made statues of gods? 222 00:14:51,950 --> 00:14:57,770 That there's something beyond it, something greater, something more noble. 223 00:14:58,460 --> 00:15:03,140 The statues were prayed to and, as we'll soon see, given lots of special 224 00:15:03,140 --> 00:15:08,040 attention. But if a statue wasn't seen as the god itself, then what was it? 225 00:15:08,420 --> 00:15:12,320 A surprising modern example may help us to answer that question. 226 00:15:15,440 --> 00:15:18,080 I have an illustration that has struck me. 227 00:15:18,780 --> 00:15:22,720 I used to take my children to the Santa in a department store. 228 00:15:22,940 --> 00:15:24,140 Now, what did they think? 229 00:15:24,640 --> 00:15:26,920 Did they think this was the real Santa? 230 00:15:27,720 --> 00:15:31,460 What about the 15 skinny Salvation Army Santas outside? 231 00:15:31,760 --> 00:15:38,560 Or did my children and did all children really know that this is a stand 232 00:15:38,560 --> 00:15:45,460 -in for Santa? It's that a certain ritual context endows this 233 00:15:45,460 --> 00:15:52,100 image, this representation with significance. That's my sense of how 234 00:15:52,100 --> 00:15:54,160 understood their statues. 235 00:15:54,360 --> 00:15:55,480 They were symbols. 236 00:15:56,840 --> 00:16:01,080 But we know of one statue in the ancient world that was more than just a symbol. 237 00:16:01,480 --> 00:16:08,200 We have a statue of Aphrodite, who is Venus. In antiquity, it's said to have 238 00:16:08,200 --> 00:16:14,460 been the first time that Aphrodite was sculpted in the nude, which became a 239 00:16:14,460 --> 00:16:15,219 tourist attraction. 240 00:16:15,220 --> 00:16:17,800 Now, one guy fell in love with it. 241 00:16:18,020 --> 00:16:20,660 But how do you go about courting a statue? 242 00:16:21,740 --> 00:16:27,320 He hid himself in the temple at night, and the next day a stain was discovered 243 00:16:27,320 --> 00:16:33,560 on the thigh of the goddess or thereabouts. So what's going on in the 244 00:16:33,560 --> 00:16:39,480 this guy who has this relationship to the statue? Does he think the stone 245 00:16:39,480 --> 00:16:43,740 is Aphrodite? Does he think it's just a model of Aphrodite? 246 00:16:44,640 --> 00:16:48,780 Thousands of years later, it's impossible to know definitively what 247 00:16:48,780 --> 00:16:50,500 people felt about their statues. 248 00:16:51,150 --> 00:16:55,090 But history makes clear they were treated as almost human. They dressed 249 00:16:55,090 --> 00:16:57,790 idols and they fed their idols and they paraded their idols around. 250 00:16:58,050 --> 00:17:04,730 To praise God, to thank God, to ask for forgiveness, to get atonement, you feed 251 00:17:04,730 --> 00:17:08,569 him. So why would the Hebrews have rebelled against the worship of these 252 00:17:08,569 --> 00:17:09,569 -lifelike images? 253 00:17:09,890 --> 00:17:12,069 One clue may be found in modern science. 254 00:17:13,130 --> 00:17:17,650 Today, digital animators are constantly working to reproduce the human image on 255 00:17:17,650 --> 00:17:21,770 screen. But they encounter a problem when the images they create are too 256 00:17:23,650 --> 00:17:30,250 Humans feel uncomfortable looking at an image when it's not an exact replica, 257 00:17:30,410 --> 00:17:32,110 but it's close to it. 258 00:17:33,130 --> 00:17:36,630 And this is called the uncanny valley. 259 00:17:37,800 --> 00:17:42,920 The uncanny valley is a scientific hypothesis which suggests that humans 260 00:17:42,920 --> 00:17:46,080 strong aversion to images that are too eerily lifelike. 261 00:17:47,120 --> 00:17:53,920 There is this area when the image is almost like human, around 96, 97 262 00:17:53,920 --> 00:17:54,920 % human. 263 00:17:55,500 --> 00:17:59,440 That makes people very uncomfortable. 264 00:18:01,780 --> 00:18:05,140 People repel against it. It was just like human. 265 00:18:05,680 --> 00:18:07,700 But there is something really wrong. 266 00:18:08,040 --> 00:18:12,640 Perhaps that is the root of the threat from idols. 267 00:18:13,680 --> 00:18:17,840 So it is possible that there was something about these quasi -lifelike 268 00:18:17,840 --> 00:18:20,900 of gods that just didn't sit right with the ancient Hebrews. 269 00:18:21,280 --> 00:18:25,400 But while the uncanny valley theory may provide some explanation as to the 270 00:18:25,400 --> 00:18:29,200 Bible's prohibition against idol worship, the larger question still 271 00:18:29,660 --> 00:18:33,680 Why did the ancient Hebrews object so strenuously to the common way of 272 00:18:33,680 --> 00:18:34,680 worshipping the gods? 273 00:18:35,020 --> 00:18:36,020 Why did they even care? 274 00:18:36,180 --> 00:18:39,940 Well, as we're about to discover, they certainly didn't want to risk offending 275 00:18:39,940 --> 00:18:44,080 their own God, as its punishments could be cruel and unusual. 276 00:18:44,540 --> 00:18:49,460 God strikes the entire population of Philistines with hemorrhoids. 277 00:18:51,260 --> 00:18:55,820 Our investigation into the rules of the Bible has uncovered compelling evidence 278 00:18:55,820 --> 00:19:00,380 of idol worship in the ancient world. From Greece to Babylon, it seems 279 00:19:00,380 --> 00:19:01,380 was doing it. 280 00:19:02,280 --> 00:19:05,000 But the Israelites were set on breaking the trend. 281 00:19:05,880 --> 00:19:09,440 How are we different from the people who are around us? Well, we don't worship 282 00:19:09,440 --> 00:19:13,760 images. You worship images. Our God doesn't need an image. We have another 283 00:19:13,760 --> 00:19:18,960 of communicating with that deity. That defines us as who we are. Don't worship 284 00:19:18,960 --> 00:19:25,320 like the other people do. Don't worship their gods because they are engraved in 285 00:19:25,320 --> 00:19:26,099 image form. 286 00:19:26,100 --> 00:19:30,040 But there's even more to this rule. It's the beginning of a major shift in the 287 00:19:30,040 --> 00:19:31,040 ancient world. 288 00:19:31,690 --> 00:19:35,870 A total shake -up in the relationship between God, man, and nature. 289 00:19:36,230 --> 00:19:42,270 Nature wasn't now God's everywhere and inhabiting everything, as many other 290 00:19:42,270 --> 00:19:47,810 Greek philosophers thought. It wasn't that God existed in the universe. God 291 00:19:47,810 --> 00:19:49,530 existed beyond the universe. 292 00:19:49,850 --> 00:19:54,370 And when God left the universe to become the transcendent deity of the Hebrews, 293 00:19:54,610 --> 00:19:57,150 he abandoned the natural world. 294 00:19:57,720 --> 00:20:02,220 God abandoning the natural world meant he could no longer be contained in man 295 00:20:02,220 --> 00:20:03,220 -made objects. 296 00:20:03,280 --> 00:20:06,880 So idols became, for the Israelites, obsolete. 297 00:20:07,460 --> 00:20:13,800 Anybody who worshipped an idol was not any longer worshipping an animated, 298 00:20:14,100 --> 00:20:16,720 God -filled entity. 299 00:20:17,060 --> 00:20:20,340 No, they were worshipping mere rock, and this was ridiculous. 300 00:20:21,200 --> 00:20:25,940 In moving the Israelites away from worshiping mere statues, this Bible rule 301 00:20:25,940 --> 00:20:30,720 provided a better understanding of the new God, who, according to the last line 302 00:20:30,720 --> 00:20:33,820 in this rule, is extremely jealous of his own people. 303 00:20:34,620 --> 00:20:38,960 What did that word mean in the ancient world? And how did this jealous God 304 00:20:38,960 --> 00:20:40,480 when the rule was broken? 305 00:20:40,840 --> 00:20:44,120 The jealous God. It means kind of passionate and intense. 306 00:20:44,600 --> 00:20:46,400 How jealous could this God be? 307 00:20:46,740 --> 00:20:48,380 Just ask the Philistines. 308 00:20:48,880 --> 00:20:52,560 The Philistines have stolen the Ark of the Covenant, and the Philistines are 309 00:20:52,560 --> 00:20:56,860 idol worshippers, worshipping golden idols throughout their society. And God 310 00:20:56,860 --> 00:21:02,200 gets very angry, and in 1 Samuel 5, verse 9, God strikes the entire 311 00:21:02,200 --> 00:21:04,360 of Philistines with hemorrhoids. 312 00:21:06,870 --> 00:21:09,690 After the point that they get struck with these hemorrhoids, they go to their 313 00:21:09,690 --> 00:21:13,430 priests and say, how can we get rid of these? And the answer comes, you need to 314 00:21:13,430 --> 00:21:17,410 make little golden versions of the hemorrhoids, just like your idols. 315 00:21:17,630 --> 00:21:20,810 Put them on a cart with the Ark of the Covenant and send it back to the 316 00:21:20,810 --> 00:21:22,250 Israelites, and then you'll be healed. 317 00:21:22,850 --> 00:21:26,370 Moral of the story, do not worship golden idols. 318 00:21:28,610 --> 00:21:32,470 Idol worship could bring down a destructive fury and was not tolerated 319 00:21:32,470 --> 00:21:34,890 Hebrew God, even when practiced by foreigners. 320 00:21:35,550 --> 00:21:38,510 But this was not the only kind of behavior that incurred God's wrath. 321 00:21:38,790 --> 00:21:42,870 And this next rule demonstrates that the foreigners weren't always the bad guys. 322 00:21:45,430 --> 00:21:49,330 Whenever you enter a town and they do not welcome you, go out into its streets 323 00:21:49,330 --> 00:21:53,690 and say, even the dust of your town that clings to our feet, we wipe off against 324 00:21:53,690 --> 00:21:54,690 you. 325 00:21:55,710 --> 00:21:58,430 Translated, do not put up with inhospitable people. 326 00:21:58,950 --> 00:22:03,450 In the ancient world, people were constantly at odds, fighting for land 327 00:22:03,450 --> 00:22:04,650 territory with their neighbors. 328 00:22:05,290 --> 00:22:09,610 So why would hospitality to strangers have been so important to the writers of 329 00:22:09,610 --> 00:22:10,610 the Bible? 330 00:22:10,730 --> 00:22:15,970 The treatment of the stranger goes to the core of what biblical rules and what 331 00:22:15,970 --> 00:22:17,150 biblical laws are really about. 332 00:22:17,430 --> 00:22:21,750 In Deuteronomy, God says, you were once strangers in the foreign land. 333 00:22:22,630 --> 00:22:23,630 Don't forget it. 334 00:22:24,790 --> 00:22:29,090 Being a good host wasn't just important to the writers of the Bible. It was a 335 00:22:29,090 --> 00:22:31,790 principle valued right across the ancient world. 336 00:22:33,800 --> 00:22:38,280 This idea of hospitality, an idea that we find not only within the Bible, but 337 00:22:38,280 --> 00:22:42,960 throughout the whole Mediterranean, that hospitality and infractions of 338 00:22:42,960 --> 00:22:46,100 hospitality are punished in drastic ways. 339 00:22:46,420 --> 00:22:49,840 In the ancient world, when you traveled, you were in great danger. 340 00:22:50,240 --> 00:22:55,140 Everyone who traveled depended on a code of hospitality. 341 00:22:56,200 --> 00:23:00,920 The key to understanding this rule may lie in one of the most infamous stories 342 00:23:00,920 --> 00:23:01,920 in the Bible. 343 00:23:02,120 --> 00:23:03,980 The destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. 344 00:23:05,380 --> 00:23:09,160 Arguably two of the most famous cities in the Bible, Sodom and Gomorrah have 345 00:23:09,160 --> 00:23:13,120 been associated with sexual sin for centuries. But it turns out that the 346 00:23:13,120 --> 00:23:17,920 story isn't really about sex at all. I would suggest it's not about homosexual 347 00:23:17,920 --> 00:23:20,200 relations or sodomy or anything of the sort. 348 00:23:20,460 --> 00:23:22,120 It's really about hospitality. 349 00:23:23,580 --> 00:23:25,280 And this is how the story goes. 350 00:23:26,700 --> 00:23:31,080 God has heard some bad things about Sodom and Gomorrah, so he decides to 351 00:23:31,080 --> 00:23:32,600 two of his angels to investigate. 352 00:23:33,060 --> 00:23:37,640 They go to visit the home of Abraham's relative, Lot, who lives in the town of 353 00:23:37,640 --> 00:23:43,280 Sodom. These angels went to Lot's house, and while they were in the house, the 354 00:23:43,280 --> 00:23:49,940 men of Sodom surrounded the house and said, Send out the visitors who came to 355 00:23:49,940 --> 00:23:54,360 your house so that we may know them. 356 00:23:56,080 --> 00:24:00,080 In the Bible, to know someone is often used as a euphemism for sex. 357 00:24:00,980 --> 00:24:04,820 The angry mob at Lot's door wants to rape the divine guests. 358 00:24:05,700 --> 00:24:09,540 And Lot said, you can't do that. These people are my guests. 359 00:24:10,180 --> 00:24:12,720 But here are my two virgin daughters. 360 00:24:13,160 --> 00:24:16,180 Take them and do whatever you want with them. 361 00:24:17,720 --> 00:24:21,900 But the men of Sodom don't want to accept the counteroffer. They only want 362 00:24:21,900 --> 00:24:24,440 divine strangers for that very reason. 363 00:24:24,910 --> 00:24:26,150 Because they're strangers. 364 00:24:26,670 --> 00:24:31,230 What the men of Sodom wanted to do was to rape the two men who had come to 365 00:24:31,230 --> 00:24:34,870 house. But I don't think it was because of their sexual orientation. 366 00:24:35,210 --> 00:24:40,930 It's a question of inhospitality. The gender of the victim is not the 367 00:24:40,930 --> 00:24:44,890 point. The sin of the people of Sodom is this. 368 00:24:45,240 --> 00:24:49,320 overt hostility, this overt aggression, this lack of welcoming to strangers. 369 00:24:49,520 --> 00:24:53,400 The ancient Hebrews had to treat strangers with respect, or else the 370 00:24:53,400 --> 00:24:54,980 consequences could be dire. 371 00:24:58,560 --> 00:25:00,860 But how did strangers regard the Hebrews? 372 00:25:01,240 --> 00:25:05,640 As we're about to discover, for most of the ancient world, the Israelites were 373 00:25:05,640 --> 00:25:07,260 thought to be more than a little eccentric. 374 00:25:07,740 --> 00:25:12,280 People felt sorry for the Jews because they only had one God. What kind of 375 00:25:12,280 --> 00:25:13,280 worldview was that? 376 00:25:15,830 --> 00:25:19,590 Investigating the Bible rules sheds light on how the ancients thought and 377 00:25:19,590 --> 00:25:22,910 principles they shared, such as the importance of being a good host. 378 00:25:23,170 --> 00:25:27,270 But while God expected you to treat your foreign guests with respect, he 379 00:25:27,270 --> 00:25:29,330 certainly didn't want you to behave like them. 380 00:25:32,110 --> 00:25:35,950 You shall not follow the practices of the nation that I am driving out before 381 00:25:35,950 --> 00:25:39,390 you. Because they did all these things, I abhorred them. 382 00:25:41,260 --> 00:25:45,720 In other words, disregard all the practices you see your neighbors doing. 383 00:25:45,720 --> 00:25:48,060 how they behave, and you're not going to mimic them. 384 00:25:48,460 --> 00:25:52,520 But what exactly were they doing that the Hebrew God found so objectionable? 385 00:25:53,280 --> 00:25:57,920 From Greece to Egypt, Rome to Babylon, people worshipped multiple gods. 386 00:25:59,480 --> 00:26:04,040 The Israelites were commanded to do things differently, to worship just one 387 00:26:05,080 --> 00:26:07,700 This practice was called monotheism. 388 00:26:08,680 --> 00:26:13,360 There only is one God, and all the other gods are frauds or impostors. 389 00:26:14,140 --> 00:26:19,700 It's certainly true that the idea of worshipping one God is a real oddity in 390 00:26:19,700 --> 00:26:23,640 ancient world. People felt sorry for the Jews because they only had one God. 391 00:26:23,840 --> 00:26:25,800 What kind of worldview is that? 392 00:26:27,520 --> 00:26:31,920 However, there's some evidence which suggests that maybe the Israelites 393 00:26:31,920 --> 00:26:33,140 the first monotheists. 394 00:26:33,770 --> 00:26:35,890 There may have been a precedent in Egypt. 395 00:26:36,310 --> 00:26:42,950 Akhenaten was a pharaoh in the 14th century BCE who eradicated 396 00:26:42,950 --> 00:26:49,930 the worship of all other gods in Egypt, focusing worship on the Aten, 397 00:26:50,110 --> 00:26:51,110 the sun disk. 398 00:26:52,030 --> 00:26:56,350 Abandoning the worship of all the traditional gods in favor of just one 399 00:26:56,350 --> 00:27:01,110 a revolutionary move, and Akhenaten's decision to only worship the sun god 400 00:27:01,110 --> 00:27:02,250 caused great turmoil. 401 00:27:02,810 --> 00:27:07,050 Some scholars have even speculated that this radical religious shift in Egypt 402 00:27:07,050 --> 00:27:11,210 could have inspired one of the most important Jewish prophets, none other 403 00:27:11,210 --> 00:27:12,210 Moses himself. 404 00:27:12,410 --> 00:27:18,110 It's interesting that there's this experiment with monotheism in Egypt and 405 00:27:18,110 --> 00:27:22,550 then we have the development of monotheism in ancient Israel. 406 00:27:23,000 --> 00:27:26,300 After that? Akhenaten is living at about 1350 BC. 407 00:27:26,820 --> 00:27:30,360 Moses is probably about 1250 or 1200 BC. 408 00:27:30,660 --> 00:27:37,400 So that's not to say that there wasn't something going on. But a direct link is 409 00:27:37,400 --> 00:27:40,800 impossible to prove, at least right now through archaeology. 410 00:27:41,640 --> 00:27:45,820 So it's possible Moses would have heard about Akhenaten and maybe even been 411 00:27:45,820 --> 00:27:48,440 influenced by his decision to worship only one god. 412 00:27:49,000 --> 00:27:52,920 However, there's a key distinction between the worship of Aten and Jewish 413 00:27:52,920 --> 00:27:53,920 monotheism. 414 00:27:55,100 --> 00:28:01,240 Akhenaten's idea is close to what we would call monotheism, but is a little 415 00:28:01,240 --> 00:28:07,060 different in that only Akhenaten and his family could actually worship the Aten, 416 00:28:07,120 --> 00:28:13,660 and all of the other Egyptians were to worship him and the Aten through him. 417 00:28:14,220 --> 00:28:18,940 So really, that's two gods, Aten the sun disk and Akhenaten the pharaoh. By 418 00:28:18,940 --> 00:28:23,000 commanding his people to worship God through him, Akhenaten may have really 419 00:28:23,000 --> 00:28:29,020 been pulling off a monumental power play. In making Aten the only god and 420 00:28:29,020 --> 00:28:35,460 himself the only person that could directly worship, Akhenaten made himself 421 00:28:35,460 --> 00:28:37,380 in charge of religion. 422 00:28:37,800 --> 00:28:40,100 Now, he was already in charge of government. 423 00:28:40,830 --> 00:28:44,710 He was already in charge of the army, and now he's in charge of religion. 424 00:28:44,930 --> 00:28:51,050 I actually think he was a very, very smart, cunning diplomat. 425 00:28:51,850 --> 00:28:55,390 Ultimately, Akhenaten's new religion was very different from what eventually 426 00:28:55,390 --> 00:28:56,610 became the Jewish faith. 427 00:28:56,850 --> 00:29:00,850 And as there's no definitive evidence to suggest otherwise, scholars still 428 00:29:00,850 --> 00:29:03,830 believe that true monotheism began with the ancient Hebrews. 429 00:29:04,730 --> 00:29:09,330 From small beginnings, monotheism has now become the most common form of 430 00:29:09,330 --> 00:29:10,330 in the world. 431 00:29:10,400 --> 00:29:13,580 practiced by countless believers across numerous faiths. 432 00:29:18,660 --> 00:29:22,940 But it wasn't just their neighbors' religious practices that the Israelites 433 00:29:22,940 --> 00:29:23,899 to reject. 434 00:29:23,900 --> 00:29:27,260 It turns out that the food they ate was also an issue. 435 00:29:28,090 --> 00:29:34,150 The dietary laws of the Israelites are the opposite of the dietary laws of the 436 00:29:34,150 --> 00:29:38,450 Egyptians. So you have to ask yourself the question, why would a people who 437 00:29:38,450 --> 00:29:44,250 spent 300 years in Egypt reject the dietary laws of the very country they 438 00:29:44,250 --> 00:29:45,250 lived in? 439 00:29:46,290 --> 00:29:50,730 The answer to this question gets at the core reason for not just this rule, but 440 00:29:50,730 --> 00:29:52,470 why many Bible rules were written. 441 00:29:52,790 --> 00:29:56,270 The Israelites wanted to define themselves from other cultures. 442 00:29:56,760 --> 00:30:00,380 and went to great lengths to emphasize just how different they were from their 443 00:30:00,380 --> 00:30:06,940 neighbors. And so how to stress that difference? One way is to have dietary 444 00:30:06,940 --> 00:30:11,400 laws. For example, the Egyptians who ate pigs a lot, the Israelites would not 445 00:30:11,400 --> 00:30:12,199 eat ham. 446 00:30:12,200 --> 00:30:14,420 But these new laws weren't always popular. 447 00:30:14,760 --> 00:30:18,660 If you'd been enjoying ham your whole life and one day a rule comes along 448 00:30:18,660 --> 00:30:22,320 now forbids you from ever eating it again, you'd probably be a little 449 00:30:22,580 --> 00:30:25,160 which is exactly how the early Israelites felt. 450 00:30:25,600 --> 00:30:29,380 We hear the grousing on the part of the Israelites after marching around in the 451 00:30:29,380 --> 00:30:33,820 desert for so long, where they miss the fish, they miss the pigs, they miss the 452 00:30:33,820 --> 00:30:38,620 melons, they miss the grapes that were in Egypt and that are not in the, quote, 453 00:30:38,660 --> 00:30:39,660 promised land. 454 00:30:41,300 --> 00:30:48,220 As our investigation continues, we reveal what meaning the Bible 455 00:30:48,220 --> 00:30:50,520 rules might have in outer space. 456 00:30:51,020 --> 00:30:54,400 We can easily imagine that humans will have presence. 457 00:30:55,280 --> 00:31:00,780 on some other world from where earth may not even be visible. We will have to 458 00:31:00,780 --> 00:31:04,640 figure out what kind of rules we come up with. 459 00:31:10,040 --> 00:31:14,000 We've opened a few portals to the ancient world and uncovered why the 460 00:31:14,000 --> 00:31:18,440 were supposed to avoid idols, other gods, and ornate altars. But as we dig 461 00:31:18,440 --> 00:31:22,660 deeper in our investigation into the rules of the Bible, we shift over into 462 00:31:22,660 --> 00:31:23,660 New Testament. 463 00:31:25,050 --> 00:31:29,750 Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances, for 464 00:31:29,750 --> 00:31:30,750 is the will of God. 465 00:31:34,870 --> 00:31:40,590 According to a Brandeis University study conducted in 2008, as many as 90 % of 466 00:31:40,590 --> 00:31:45,470 Americans pray at least once a day, and as many as 50 % pray multiple times a 467 00:31:45,470 --> 00:31:50,750 day. There are even people for whom praying takes up almost 100 % of their 468 00:31:51,550 --> 00:31:52,550 Monks. 469 00:31:58,060 --> 00:32:01,960 There are active monasteries all over the world, and much of their work is 470 00:32:01,960 --> 00:32:07,020 prayer. There's a monk that I met on a recent trip to Egypt. 471 00:32:08,660 --> 00:32:13,980 His name is Mercurius, and he eats modestly, and he preserves all of his 472 00:32:13,980 --> 00:32:16,780 strength for his opportunity to pray. 473 00:32:17,020 --> 00:32:22,640 He receives prayer requests from Facebook from all over the world. 474 00:32:23,230 --> 00:32:27,970 He's 28 years old, and you have to ask this guy, how did this come to be? 475 00:32:28,930 --> 00:32:32,990 Every day we share viral videos and comment on how big our nieces and 476 00:32:32,990 --> 00:32:33,729 are getting. 477 00:32:33,730 --> 00:32:38,030 But here's a monk using social media to carry out this Bible rule while also 478 00:32:38,030 --> 00:32:40,490 putting his stamp on recent history in the Middle East. 479 00:32:41,190 --> 00:32:46,370 And you have to ask this guy, you as a young person might have been part of 480 00:32:46,370 --> 00:32:49,410 has been known to be known as the Arab Spring. 481 00:32:50,120 --> 00:32:54,580 You could be part of this emancipation. And he said to me, without missing a 482 00:32:54,580 --> 00:32:55,740 beat, I was a part of that. 483 00:32:56,380 --> 00:32:58,840 I've been praying for this since I arrived. 484 00:33:02,340 --> 00:33:06,920 This rule commands people to pray ceaselessly. We have no real evidence 485 00:33:06,920 --> 00:33:10,000 prayers work at all, and yet people still pray every day. 486 00:33:10,860 --> 00:33:15,140 There are a lot of experiments over the centuries to try and determine whether 487 00:33:15,140 --> 00:33:16,360 prayer works. 488 00:33:18,480 --> 00:33:22,880 And you end up with a whole mess of variables, which in science we would say 489 00:33:22,880 --> 00:33:27,020 just doesn't support that prayer works. Somebody else might want to say, well, 490 00:33:27,160 --> 00:33:31,160 it's very hard to disprove. In any case, I think that one of the things you have 491 00:33:31,160 --> 00:33:35,500 to be grateful for, if prayer can in fact be shown to not particularly work, 492 00:33:35,500 --> 00:33:37,240 that cursing probably doesn't work either. 493 00:33:38,180 --> 00:33:42,340 To fully grasp the importance of prayer in the ancient world, and in our own 494 00:33:42,340 --> 00:33:46,460 time, we'll need to step outside the Bible and into the pages of the Quran. 495 00:33:58,990 --> 00:34:03,550 Muslims are supposed to pray five times a day, kneeling towards Mecca, a rule 496 00:34:03,550 --> 00:34:06,250 that goes all the way back to the days of the Prophet Muhammad. 497 00:34:17,670 --> 00:34:24,210 So in 2007, when the Malaysian space program sent up its first astronaut, a 498 00:34:24,210 --> 00:34:25,290 natural question arose. 499 00:34:26,590 --> 00:34:28,110 How is he going to pray? 500 00:34:28,480 --> 00:34:32,960 International space station is close to about a couple of hundred miles up in 501 00:34:32,960 --> 00:34:33,960 the orbit. 502 00:34:35,080 --> 00:34:39,600 And it goes around 16 times around the Earth every day. 503 00:34:40,300 --> 00:34:43,100 How are you going to find the direction to Mecca? 504 00:34:43,780 --> 00:34:50,440 And so here is a fascinating case of modern day 21st century meets 505 00:34:50,440 --> 00:34:53,219 the rules of 7th century. 506 00:34:54,889 --> 00:34:58,790 And let's say you was even able to locate Mecca for a brief second. There 507 00:34:58,790 --> 00:35:00,430 another hurdle, zero gravity. 508 00:35:03,750 --> 00:35:06,110 How exactly do you kneel down and pray? 509 00:35:07,330 --> 00:35:13,290 Now, in zero gravity, as you can imagine, that can be a bit of a 510 00:35:13,290 --> 00:35:15,490 fact, you may probably go round and round. 511 00:35:15,710 --> 00:35:19,890 The problem was so serious that an official conference was called to come 512 00:35:19,890 --> 00:35:23,010 decision on how to pray properly while traveling through space. 513 00:35:23,410 --> 00:35:24,410 And they said, well... 514 00:35:24,540 --> 00:35:31,400 You try your best to find a place or to make a gesture as if you are 515 00:35:31,400 --> 00:35:33,340 trying to place your forehead on the ground. 516 00:35:33,660 --> 00:35:40,320 But if you can, they suggested that you can use motions of your eyelids to use 517 00:35:40,320 --> 00:35:41,960 the different motions of prayers. 518 00:35:42,500 --> 00:35:48,680 And if even you cannot do that, you can imagine praying 519 00:35:48,680 --> 00:35:50,120 in your head. 520 00:35:58,190 --> 00:36:01,250 When you think about it, traveling through space is just the beginning. 521 00:36:02,210 --> 00:36:06,150 As the prospect of traveling to other planets becomes more real with each 522 00:36:06,150 --> 00:36:11,110 passing day, it calls into question how we follow not just Bible rules, but any 523 00:36:11,110 --> 00:36:12,550 rules written for this world. 524 00:36:13,570 --> 00:36:19,470 Say, for example, if you're on Mars, Mecca is just all the way a dot in the 525 00:36:20,510 --> 00:36:25,730 Do we still use the sunrise and sunset times of the planet Earth? 526 00:36:26,480 --> 00:36:31,640 We will have to figure out what kind of rules we come up with. 527 00:36:33,340 --> 00:36:37,540 As humans evolve and change, and as the distance between us and the period when 528 00:36:37,540 --> 00:36:41,360 these rules were written grows, it calls into question why they came about in 529 00:36:41,360 --> 00:36:42,259 the first place. 530 00:36:42,260 --> 00:36:46,140 It's not like God thinks, I've got some rules, I need some people to fulfill 531 00:36:46,140 --> 00:36:51,340 them. It's that God cares about people and the rules develop to serve the 532 00:36:51,340 --> 00:36:57,770 people. It's not the rules that have survived intact from these centuries, 533 00:36:57,770 --> 00:36:59,590 it is the spirit of the rules. 534 00:37:03,190 --> 00:37:08,610 Another portal is about to open as we uncover what happens when a Bible rule 535 00:37:08,610 --> 00:37:10,970 seriously and tragically misunderstood. 536 00:37:11,870 --> 00:37:17,210 How somebody could be so disrespectful of what came before them is just 537 00:37:17,210 --> 00:37:19,190 appalling to me. 538 00:37:22,800 --> 00:37:27,220 In the ancient world, the Bible rules forbid a lot of behavior, but it wasn't 539 00:37:27,220 --> 00:37:29,220 enough to describe what not to do. 540 00:37:29,440 --> 00:37:32,240 This next rule goes one step further. 541 00:37:35,420 --> 00:37:41,020 Break down their altars, smash their pillars, chew down their sacred poles, 542 00:37:41,020 --> 00:37:42,580 burn their idols with fire. 543 00:37:45,760 --> 00:37:50,420 In other words, here's how you deal with images of other gods and accessories of 544 00:37:50,420 --> 00:37:51,420 other religions. 545 00:37:51,500 --> 00:37:54,800 break their temples, and set their idols and icons on fire. 546 00:37:55,240 --> 00:37:58,840 But do we have any actual evidence that this rule was followed? 547 00:37:59,160 --> 00:38:03,360 We do have statues that are destroyed. For example, there are both Egyptian and 548 00:38:03,360 --> 00:38:09,720 Canaanite statues that have the arms hacked off. But that's probably not 549 00:38:09,720 --> 00:38:14,000 of a prohibition against the worship of such idols. It's more likely an 550 00:38:14,000 --> 00:38:15,360 attacking, marauding force. 551 00:38:16,500 --> 00:38:19,960 Wartime produced the greatest destruction of idols and other religious 552 00:38:19,960 --> 00:38:24,670 paraphernalia. And while this rule might be tailored to the early Israelites, it 553 00:38:24,670 --> 00:38:27,150 echoes the overall mindset of the ancient world. 554 00:38:29,110 --> 00:38:31,790 Why was it so common to destroy a statue? 555 00:38:32,770 --> 00:38:38,760 Well, in ancient warfare, when you conquered another and you did so because 556 00:38:38,760 --> 00:38:43,100 god was leading you into war, you were also conquering the gods of that other 557 00:38:43,100 --> 00:38:48,260 nation. And to demonstrate the superiority of your god, you smashed the 558 00:38:48,260 --> 00:38:50,660 the gods of the defeated nation. 559 00:38:51,160 --> 00:38:55,440 The way in which we understand and process images has changed drastically 560 00:38:55,440 --> 00:38:56,660 the last 2 ,000 years. 561 00:38:56,900 --> 00:39:00,640 And perhaps this evolution is the key to decoding this rule. 562 00:39:01,320 --> 00:39:03,880 People began worshipping the idol. 563 00:39:04,620 --> 00:39:06,540 as if it was the deity. 564 00:39:06,900 --> 00:39:12,860 See, part of the limitation of religious iconography and art is we cannot 565 00:39:12,860 --> 00:39:13,940 contain the divine. 566 00:39:14,540 --> 00:39:19,100 We like to believe as though we can contain the divine at times. Whenever 567 00:39:19,100 --> 00:39:23,400 have thought we've gotten too sure of that, they've said, destroy it. 568 00:39:24,560 --> 00:39:28,820 The controversial nature of religious icons is still very much an issue in 569 00:39:28,820 --> 00:39:29,820 today's world. 570 00:39:29,850 --> 00:39:34,110 Religious imagery can be a source of tension between faiths, as one recent 571 00:39:34,110 --> 00:39:35,650 from Afghanistan demonstrates. 572 00:39:36,410 --> 00:39:40,670 During the 6th century, two monumental statues of Buddha were carved into the 573 00:39:40,670 --> 00:39:42,490 side of a cliff in central Afghanistan. 574 00:39:42,970 --> 00:39:47,870 They stood there for 1500 years until March 2001, when they were destroyed by 575 00:39:47,870 --> 00:39:48,870 the Taliban. 576 00:39:51,120 --> 00:39:55,880 As an archaeologist, watching the Buddhas being destroyed was just 577 00:39:55,880 --> 00:40:00,840 heartbreaking. To have somebody could be so disrespectful of what came before 578 00:40:00,840 --> 00:40:03,640 them is just appalling to me. 579 00:40:04,860 --> 00:40:11,680 It is just shocking and a heartache to see the empty niches where those were. 580 00:40:12,160 --> 00:40:16,320 And perhaps it's another example of the subtle difference between following the 581 00:40:16,320 --> 00:40:19,080 spirit and not so much the letter of the rules. 582 00:40:19,660 --> 00:40:23,300 You can make the analogy that the Taliban were destroying the idols much 583 00:40:23,300 --> 00:40:24,460 Bible said to do so. 584 00:40:24,820 --> 00:40:30,560 And they may have felt quite rightful and righteous in doing so. But in so 585 00:40:30,560 --> 00:40:33,980 destroying them, they destroyed them for the rest of the world that may not and 586 00:40:33,980 --> 00:40:35,740 probably doesn't have the same beliefs. 587 00:40:37,280 --> 00:40:39,920 The rules of the Bible are often multidimensional. 588 00:40:40,400 --> 00:40:44,260 Today, thousands of years after they were first written down, it can be 589 00:40:44,260 --> 00:40:46,940 challenging for us to get to the heart of their intended meaning. 590 00:40:47,560 --> 00:40:51,620 But for the Bible's original audience, the true intention of these rules was 591 00:40:51,620 --> 00:40:52,620 more than apparent. 592 00:40:52,740 --> 00:40:56,600 The language was not originally mystical, right? I mean, this was a 593 00:40:56,600 --> 00:40:58,080 that was designed to communicate with people. 594 00:40:58,360 --> 00:40:59,520 Certainly, it had poetry. 595 00:40:59,760 --> 00:41:00,760 It had nuance. 596 00:41:01,120 --> 00:41:04,180 But it was not designed to be a secret code to be cracked. 597 00:41:04,680 --> 00:41:09,740 Yet even today, the Bible rules about false idols remain powerful and very 598 00:41:09,740 --> 00:41:14,080 clear. In the ancient world, idols could be smashed, melted down. 599 00:41:14,300 --> 00:41:18,760 They weren't lasting. They were ephemeral. And so people, I think, began 600 00:41:18,760 --> 00:41:22,460 that why are we worshiping that which we ourselves can destroy? 601 00:41:23,480 --> 00:41:27,160 An ancient story about Abraham may be the final word. 602 00:41:27,520 --> 00:41:30,500 Abraham's father, Terah, is an idol salesman. 603 00:41:31,100 --> 00:41:36,620 One day, Terach is going to the bank and he says to Abraham, OK, listen, you 604 00:41:36,620 --> 00:41:37,620 watch the shop. 605 00:41:38,280 --> 00:41:43,240 Terach goes out. Abraham picks up a big stick and smashes all the idols except 606 00:41:43,240 --> 00:41:45,320 the one, the big one at the end. 607 00:41:45,860 --> 00:41:50,100 Father comes back, is aghast and says, what happened? 608 00:41:50,380 --> 00:41:55,820 And Abraham says, well, the big idol took that stick and smashed all the 609 00:41:55,820 --> 00:42:00,180 idols. And Terach, Abraham's father, said an idol can't. 610 00:42:00,410 --> 00:42:03,310 do that. And Abraham said, listen to yourself. 611 00:42:04,210 --> 00:42:09,750 I mean, an idol doesn't have the power that you keep thinking it does. 612 00:42:11,990 --> 00:42:17,150 Today, we may no longer worship the idols of Terah's shop, but there are 613 00:42:17,150 --> 00:42:18,870 objects we do idolize. 614 00:42:19,150 --> 00:42:24,530 Today we worship, we focus on things outside of the holy. We look at money 615 00:42:24,530 --> 00:42:29,810 power. We look at fancy shoes and cars and houses. These are not entities 616 00:42:29,810 --> 00:42:34,270 sources that can bring us peace bring us wisdom bring us the healing that we're 617 00:42:34,270 --> 00:42:38,850 searching for and so abraham's simple lesson about the power that idols 618 00:42:38,850 --> 00:42:44,570 still resonates with us even today it's like the old saying that doesn't matter 619 00:42:44,570 --> 00:42:48,770 how many houses or fancy shoes or cars you put down in this life the size of 620 00:42:48,770 --> 00:42:50,410 your funeral is always going to depend on the weather 57009

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