OLD TESTAMENT CHRONOLOGY
SOTW Introduction: How Do We Know What Happened
Creation Story
Adam and Eve
Cane and Able
Ch 1 - The Earliest People
Noahs Ark
Ch 2 - Egyptians Live on the Nile River
Ch 3 - The First Writing
Tower of Babel
(Also goes nicely around Chap 5)
Ch 4 - The Old Kingdom of Egypt
Ch 5 - The First Sumerian Dictator
Ch 6 - The Jewish People
God Speaks to Abraham
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob
Joseph Goes to Egypt
The longer story of Joseph
(the SOTW version skips some parts)
Ch 7 - Hammurabi and the Babylonians
(Comparing Hammurabi's code to the 10 Commandments can go here,
even though the 10 Commandments Come Later)
Ch 8 - The Assyrians
Job
(Job is hard to date but considered very old...could go anywhere really. There was space here.)
(Comparing Hammurabi's code to the 10 Commandments can go here,
even though the 10 Commandments Come Later)
Ch 8 - The Assyrians
Job
(Job is hard to date but considered very old...could go anywhere really. There was space here.)
Ch 9 - India (River Valley People)
Ch 10 - Ancient China
Ch 11 - Ancient Africa
Ch 12 - Middle Kingdom of Egypt
Ch 13 - New Kingdom of Egypt
Ch 14 - Isrealites Leave Egypt
Isreal in the Wilderness
10 Commandments
Walls of Jericho
Isreal Enters Promise Land (Joshua)
Judges:
Samson
Deborah
Gideon
Samuel
Saul
David
Solomon
Ch 15 - The Phonicians
Ruth (could be put anywhere after David/Solomon)
Elijah/Elisha
Story of Namaan
Hosea
Ch 16 - The Return of Assyria
Jonah
Jeremiah
Ch 17 - Babylon Takes Over Again
For this one, some of the Bible stories take place mid-chapter, so...
Nebuchadnezzar's Madness - Paragraph 1 - 3
Daniel Captured/Eating Restrictions
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego
Nebuchadnezzar's Madness - Paragraph 4 to End
Ch 10 - Ancient China
Ch 11 - Ancient Africa
Ch 12 - Middle Kingdom of Egypt
Ch 13 - New Kingdom of Egypt
Ch 14 - Isrealites Leave Egypt
Isreal in the Wilderness
10 Commandments
Walls of Jericho
Isreal Enters Promise Land (Joshua)
Judges:
Samson
Deborah
Gideon
Samuel
Saul
David
Solomon
Ch 15 - The Phonicians
Ruth (could be put anywhere after David/Solomon)
Elijah/Elisha
Story of Namaan
Hosea
Ch 16 - The Return of Assyria
Jonah
Jeremiah
Ch 17 - Babylon Takes Over Again
For this one, some of the Bible stories take place mid-chapter, so...
Nebuchadnezzar's Madness - Paragraph 1 - 3
Daniel Captured/Eating Restrictions
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego
Nebuchadnezzar's Madness - Paragraph 4 to End
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon
NOTE ABOUT CHAPTER ORDER: At this point, we decided to skip ahead to Chap 21, so I could do the whole story of Daniel in one place, then go back and read all the chapters on the Greeks. That also makes it easy to do all the rest of the Old Testament stories before starting Ancient Greece. But you wouldn't have to do that. All the chapters I skipped to do later are grayed out below.
Ch 18: Life in Early Crete
Ch 19: The Early Greeks
Ch 20: Greece Gets Civilized Again
Daniel and Beltshazar - Writing on the Wall
Ch 21: The Medes and the Persians
Daniel and the Lions Den
(Note, who "King Darius" is debated, but it's thought
that Cyrus the great put people over areas of his kingdom,
and that King Darius was who he placed over Babylon)
Rebuilding of Jerusalem (described in Nehemiah)
Esther
ISREAL BETWEEN THE TESTAMENTS
That's the end of the Old Testament stories, but between the old and new testament, Alexander the Great took over the area where Isreal was. He gave them a lot of freedom to practice their religion, but one of the Seleucids did not, and oppressed the Jews greatly (the Seleucids were descendants of Seleucus, one of the four generals who ruled the areas conquered by Alexander the Great after his death). This lead to the Maccabean revolt, which made Isreal an independant nation for a few hundred years. The story of Hanukkah (outside the Bible) directly relates to this. If you want to add some study of this, a good place to do it is after Chapter 25.
NEW TESTAMENT
Story of the World puts both the birth of Jesus, a brief summary of his ministry, and his death, in Chapter 37. You could use their retelling, adding some of the stories from his ministry in the middle, and stories from acts between chapter 37-38.
Or you could replace this section completely, and take time out from SOTW to do a more thorough study of the New Testament at this point. This would be the simplest way to do things, without changing the order of the SOTW chapters.
So, that's the simple version. Below is the more complex version with some supplemental history that's not in SOTW.
I wanted my child to learn more about the first 5 Roman Emperors, making connections with Bible stories as we learned about them, so that meant changing up the order of SOTW chapters at this point to be more chronological. If you would like to do this too, below is the order I used (and some other useful dates). SOTW also introduced Diocletian before Constantine, and while that is after the period of Biblical stories, I wanted to add some church history about the persecution of Christians under Diocletian, so I changed the order there as well (and added/changed some material in the chapters) to make that make more sense. I'm still editing that text but I'll add it soon.
The first five Caesars reigns are listed in purple below, and some other later Caesars mentioned in SOTW, in case like me you would like to add more info about them.
Augustus (REIGN 27 BC – AD 14)
Or you could replace this section completely, and take time out from SOTW to do a more thorough study of the New Testament at this point. This would be the simplest way to do things, without changing the order of the SOTW chapters.
So, that's the simple version. Below is the more complex version with some supplemental history that's not in SOTW.
I wanted my child to learn more about the first 5 Roman Emperors, making connections with Bible stories as we learned about them, so that meant changing up the order of SOTW chapters at this point to be more chronological. If you would like to do this too, below is the order I used (and some other useful dates). SOTW also introduced Diocletian before Constantine, and while that is after the period of Biblical stories, I wanted to add some church history about the persecution of Christians under Diocletian, so I changed the order there as well (and added/changed some material in the chapters) to make that make more sense. I'm still editing that text but I'll add it soon.
The first five Caesars reigns are listed in purple below, and some other later Caesars mentioned in SOTW, in case like me you would like to add more info about them.
Augustus (REIGN 27 BC – AD 14)
-Augustus is covered by SOTW. Jesus' birth/childhood happened during his reign
Ch 36: The First Roman Prince
Ch 37 Section 1: The Birth of Jesus
Tiberius (REIGN 14 - 37 AD)
Tiberius is not mentioned in SOTW. Most of Jesus ministry, and his death and resurrection, happened during this period, as well as some of the early events in Acts.
Ch 37 Section 2: Jesus Crucified and Resurrected
Caligula (REIGN 37 - 41 AD)
Ch 36: The First Roman Prince
Ch 37 Section 1: The Birth of Jesus
Tiberius (REIGN 14 - 37 AD)
Tiberius is not mentioned in SOTW. Most of Jesus ministry, and his death and resurrection, happened during this period, as well as some of the early events in Acts.
Ch 37 Section 2: Jesus Crucified and Resurrected
Caligula (REIGN 37 - 41 AD)
He is not mentioned in SOTW. His reign was short because he was paranoid, ruthless, and insane, and was soon assassinated.
Claudius (REIGN 41 - 54 AD)
He is not mentioned in SOTW. The grandnephew of Augustus, he was left with a limp and partial deafness from a childhood illness. He probably survived Caligula's reign because he wasn't considered a threat. He was chosen by the assassins of Caligula to be the next Caesar, and ruled fairly well. A large part of the book of Acts took place under his reign.
Nero (REIGN 41 - 54 AD)
Nero is covered in SOTW. It was only 3 years into Nero's reign when the Apostle Paul "appealed to Caesar" when charges were made against him in Jerusalem (Nero's persecutions of Christians had not begun yet then). That persecution would start shortly after Paul was sent to Rome, and he would be killed there. It's important to note that persecution of Christians didn't stay at this level after Nero. For the period between Nero and Diocletian, Christianity, while not embraced, was not attacked to the same degree (though it differed under various emperors). Because of this and that archeologists/historians no longer believe Christians hid in the catacombs (silverware found there the believe was for Funerary feasts, not because they were living there),I rewrote the "Christians in the Catacombs" section.
Ch 39: Section 1 "Nero, The evil emperor" (Nero, Christian Persecution - Reign 54-68, Fire 64 Ad)
Ch 40 (Celts, Boadicea, 60-61 BC) - moved here because this happened during Nero's reign
Ch 39: Section 2. "Christians in the Catacombs" (My rewrite "Christians in Rome").
Though I only covered the first five emperors with my kids, I'm including some others just for place markers here.
Year of 4 Emperors (68-69 AD)
Vespasian (REIGN 69-79 AD)
Ch 38 (Jerusalem Destroyed - AD 70)
Masada (AD 66 - 73)
Pompeii, Vesuvius erupts (AD 79, not long after the death of Vespasian)
Various Emperors
Diocletian (REIGN 284-305)
While persecution of Christians waned after Nero, it was reignited under Diocletian. His reign was the worst and most widespread period of persecution of Christians after Nero (though, since he divided the empire, it mainly only affected his section of the empire). I felt it was important to have his story listed before Constantine, to give more weight to the changes that Constantine brought.
I included some info about Diocletian's persecution of Christians and re-wrote the chapters a bit to work
Ch 40 B (Diocletian Divides Roman Empire - 286 AD)
Constantine (REIGN 306-312)
Ch 39 C (Constantine, Reign 306 - 312)
Ch 41 Barbarians Attack (Attila the Hun came between Visigoths and Vandals)
Ch 42 Fall of Rome
Claudius (REIGN 41 - 54 AD)
He is not mentioned in SOTW. The grandnephew of Augustus, he was left with a limp and partial deafness from a childhood illness. He probably survived Caligula's reign because he wasn't considered a threat. He was chosen by the assassins of Caligula to be the next Caesar, and ruled fairly well. A large part of the book of Acts took place under his reign.
Nero (REIGN 41 - 54 AD)
Nero is covered in SOTW. It was only 3 years into Nero's reign when the Apostle Paul "appealed to Caesar" when charges were made against him in Jerusalem (Nero's persecutions of Christians had not begun yet then). That persecution would start shortly after Paul was sent to Rome, and he would be killed there. It's important to note that persecution of Christians didn't stay at this level after Nero. For the period between Nero and Diocletian, Christianity, while not embraced, was not attacked to the same degree (though it differed under various emperors). Because of this and that archeologists/historians no longer believe Christians hid in the catacombs (silverware found there the believe was for Funerary feasts, not because they were living there),I rewrote the "Christians in the Catacombs" section.
Ch 39: Section 1 "Nero, The evil emperor" (Nero, Christian Persecution - Reign 54-68, Fire 64 Ad)
Ch 40 (Celts, Boadicea, 60-61 BC) - moved here because this happened during Nero's reign
Ch 39: Section 2. "Christians in the Catacombs" (My rewrite "Christians in Rome").
Though I only covered the first five emperors with my kids, I'm including some others just for place markers here.
Year of 4 Emperors (68-69 AD)
Vespasian (REIGN 69-79 AD)
Ch 38 (Jerusalem Destroyed - AD 70)
Masada (AD 66 - 73)
Pompeii, Vesuvius erupts (AD 79, not long after the death of Vespasian)
Various Emperors
Diocletian (REIGN 284-305)
While persecution of Christians waned after Nero, it was reignited under Diocletian. His reign was the worst and most widespread period of persecution of Christians after Nero (though, since he divided the empire, it mainly only affected his section of the empire). I felt it was important to have his story listed before Constantine, to give more weight to the changes that Constantine brought.
I included some info about Diocletian's persecution of Christians and re-wrote the chapters a bit to work
Ch 40 B (Diocletian Divides Roman Empire - 286 AD)
Constantine (REIGN 306-312)
Ch 39 C (Constantine, Reign 306 - 312)
Ch 41 Barbarians Attack (Attila the Hun came between Visigoths and Vandals)
Ch 42 Fall of Rome
I just did this same thing recently -- wanting to line up these books with Biblical accounts!
ReplyDeleteJust curious...did your stories end up in about the same place as mine. I still need to do this for New Testament...we're getting close on that.
DeleteThank you SO MUCH FOR THIS!! :) I am printing this out now to keep on hand!
ReplyDeleteYou're so welcome! Glad it was helpful!
DeleteThis is great! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteYou're very welcome! :-)
DeleteI was just about to try to figure this out myself - thanks so much for sharing your work! Super helpful!
ReplyDeleteYou're so welcome!
DeleteThank you for sharing this! Have you integrated the Bible past chapter 25 in SOTW? We are currently on ch 25 as I find this looking for resources to tie in more bible history. Exactly what I was looking for!
ReplyDeleteGlad to help. All of the Old Testament stories that were in the Children's Bibles we had happened before chapter 25. After Chapter 21 it it splits off from Biblical history. You can look at the "Between the Testaments" section for some things you can add about Jewish history that's not included in the Bible, though. This history makes some of the things in the New Testament (like the "Hellenist" Jews and why many Jews spoke Greek) make more sense.
DeleteI also just added the New Testament integration (thought I still need to add some text that makes it easier if you re-order the chapters like I did...you can just stick everything after chapter 37 though, which is when the NT story picks up.