Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 July 2009
The Bible as we know it began to take shape in Jerusalem in the late eighth century b.c.e., in the days of Isaiah, the prophet, and Hezekiah, the king of Judah. Powerful social and political forces converged at that time resulting in the collection of earlier, mostly oral, traditions and the writing of new texts. In addition, Jerusalem emerged then as a powerful political center. The small, isolated town of Jerusalem mushroomed into a large metropolis. Writing became part of the urban bureaucracy as well as a political extension of growing royal power. These changes would be the catalyst for the collecting and composing of biblical literature. It was the dawn of the literature of the Bible.
What were the local catalysts for such a dramatic transformation of Judean society? Why did biblical literature begin to flourish in the late eighth century? The answers to these questions begin with the rise of the Assyrian Empire and the social, economic, and political challenges that it would present. In particular, the exile of the northern kingdom by Assyria and the subsequent urbanization of the rural south were the catalysts for literary activity that resulted in the composition of extended portions of the Hebrew Bible. The exile of northern Israel also gave rise to the prophetic works of Amos, Hosea, Micah, and Isaiah of Jerusalem, to priestly liturgies and to ritual texts, as well as to a pre-Deuteronomic historical work.
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