101 Myths Of The Bible : How Ancient Scribes In... Apr 2026

Greenberg focuses exclusively on the Old Testament (Tanakh), examining how scribes molded indigenous polytheistic religions into a single monotheistic framework.

: Scribes combined Egyptian, Near Eastern, and Greek myths with local legends and religious propaganda to "invent" much of early biblical history. 101 myths of the Bible : how ancient scribes in...

In , author Gary Greenberg explores how the editors of the Old Testament adapted ancient folklore, legends, and myths from neighboring cultures—particularly Egypt and Mesopotamia—to establish the foundation of monotheistic religion. Greenberg, an Egyptologist and president of the Biblical Archaeology Society of New York , argues that these stories are not literal history but "literary artifacts" layered by scribes to serve political and religious agendas. Core Themes and Methodology Greenberg focuses exclusively on the Old Testament (Tanakh),

: A major focus of the book is the heavy influence of Egyptian mythology on the Book of Genesis. Greenberg posits that authors had deep knowledge of Egyptian literary sources, using them as the basis for primeval history. Greenberg, an Egyptologist and president of the Biblical

: The book highlights internal contradictions in the text—such as having two separate creation and flood accounts—as evidence of multiple sources being edited together (the Documentary Hypothesis).