Thursday , March 28 2024
The familiar stories and people of the Bible come alive in this fine documentary series from The History Channel.

DVD Review: The Mysteries of the Bible Collection

Whether you believe that the Bible is directly from the mouth of God, divinely inspired, or simply a literary masterwork, there is no doubt that its narratives have been studied by scholars and schoolchildren, religious professionals and lay people for centuries. New meanings, hidden truths and ideas can be gleaned from the ancient stories, and are simply there for the taking. The words and ideas contained in the texts have shaped western history for generations.

The History Channel’s Mysteries of the Bible Collection explores these familiar texts in new ways, revealing facts and theories about the people and of The Book, their times and their stories. It presents a fascinating and well-produced examination of the most widely read book in the human experience.

The series makes the ancient tales come alive, giving context to the ancient texts, spanning from the earliest chapters of the Torah (the Five Books of Moses) through the rest of the Hebrew Bible and New Testament. Enhanced by classical paintings of Biblical personalities, beautiful photography, and the analysis of well-known and respected biblical scholars, Mysteries presents viewers with deep background on the places and times in which these well-known stories unfolded.

Filmed on location in the Holy Land, and narrated by Richard Kiley and Jean Simmons, the seven-DVD set features the original 22 full-length episodes and several “extras.” My only disappointment with Mysteries is that it doesn’t follow the Bible chronologically. The first volume, for example jumps from Abraham (one of the first stories in the Torah) to Herod, two millennia later (given that Biblical time is subject to debate, and part of the Christian, but not Jewish, Bible.) The next episode on the first DVD jumps back to the Ten Commandments, another early story in the Biblical canon. This is not as much of an issue in the later volumes, which are more topical in nature. 

The seven-volume set includes:

  • Volume 1: Abraham: One Man, One God; Herod the Great; The 10 Commandments; Bonus Documentary
  • Volume 2: Jacob’s Ladder; Joseph: Master of Dreams; Cain and Abel; Queen Esther: Far Away and Long Ago
  • Volume 3: King Solomon; King David: Poet Warrior; The Last Revolt; Archenemy: The Philistines
  • Volume 4: Jesus: Holy Child; The Execution of Jesus; Bonus Documentary
  • Volume 5: The Lost Years of Jesus; The Last Supper; Paul the Apostle
  • Volume 6: The Bible’s Greatest Secrets; Biblical Angels; Heaven and Hell; Apocalypse: The Puzzle of Revelation
  • Volume 7: Magic and Miracles; Prophets: Soul Catchers; Bonus Documentary

The three bonus features include:

  • Ancient Mysteries: Ark of the Covenant
  • Ancient Mysteries: The Shroud of Turin
  • In Search of History: The Holy Lance

About Barbara Barnett

A Jewish mother and (young 🙃) grandmother, Barbara Barnett is an author and professional Hazzan (Cantor). A member of the Conservative Movement's Cantors Assembly and the Jewish Renewal movement's clergy association OHALAH, the clergy association of the Jewish Renewal movement. In her other life, she is a critically acclaimed fantasy/science fiction author as well as the author of a non-fiction exploration of the TV series House, M.D. and contributor to the book Spiritual Pregnancy. She Publisher/Executive Editor of Blogcritics, (blogcritics.org).

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