Religious Timelines

What the sacred narratives say happened, what the historical record shows, and where they converge and diverge — across three Abrahamic traditions spanning 3,000 years.

Judaism ~1200 BCE
Christianity ~30 CE
Islam ~610 CE

Comparative Origins

When do these religions first appear — according to their own narratives, and according to independent evidence?

Judaism
~1200–1000 BCE
Biblical Narrative
  • ~2000 BCE — Abraham receives God's covenant
  • ~1500 BCE — Moses leads Exodus, receives Torah at Sinai
  • ~1000 BCE — King David establishes Jerusalem
  • ~960 BCE — Solomon builds the First Temple
  • ~586 BCE — Babylonians destroy First Temple
Historical Record
  • ~1208 BCE — Merneptah Stele (first mention of "Israel")
  • ~900–800 BCE — Oldest biblical texts composed
  • ~515 BCE — Second Temple built (confirmed archeologically)
  • ~200 BCE — Dead Sea Scrolls era
  • 70 CE — Romans destroy Second Temple
Christianity
~30–50 CE
Biblical Narrative
  • ~4 BCE — Jesus born in Bethlehem
  • ~27 CE — Jesus begins public ministry
  • ~30 CE — Crucifixion and resurrection
  • ~33 CE — Pentecost, church is born
  • ~45–60 CE — Paul's missionary journeys
Historical Record
  • ~50 CE — Paul's letters (earliest documents)
  • ~70–100 CE — Gospels written
  • ~112 CE — Pliny's letter (first Roman reference)
  • 313 CE — Edict of Milan, Christianity legalized
  • 325 CE — Council of Nicaea, doctrine formalized
Islam
~610 CE
Religious Narrative
  • 610 CE — Muhammad receives first revelation
  • 622 CE — Hijra to Medina (Year 1 AH)
  • 624 CE — Battle of Badr
  • 630 CE — Conquest of Mecca
  • 632 CE — Muhammad dies
Historical Record
  • ~640s CE — Earliest non-Muslim references
  • ~650 CE — Quran compiled under Uthman
  • 691 CE — Dome of the Rock (oldest monument)
  • ~700s CE — Oldest Quran manuscripts
  • ~760–900 CE — Major hadith collections

Gaps Between Traditions

Judaism → Christianity
~1,200
years
Christianity → Islam
~580
years
Judaism → Islam
~1,800
years

What Each Religion Actually Requires

The core beliefs, practices, and structures — stripped to essentials.

Judaism — Covenant & Law

Judaism is built on a covenant (brit) between God and the Jewish people. It's less about belief and more about practice and obligation.

Core Framework

  • Torah — The five books of Moses. The foundational text. Believed to be given by God to Moses at Sinai.
  • 613 Mitzvot — 613 commandments. 248 positive ("do this"), 365 negative ("don't do this"). These govern everything from diet to business to sex to agriculture.
  • Talmud — Massive body of rabbinical commentary and legal debate. Two versions: Babylonian (authoritative) and Jerusalem. Compiled ~200–500 CE. Judaism is essentially a tradition of arguing about what the law means — the arguments themselves are sacred.
  • Shabbat — Weekly rest, Friday sundown to Saturday sundown. Non-negotiable.
  • Kashrut — Dietary laws. No pork, no shellfish, no mixing meat and dairy, ritual slaughter requirements.
  • Circumcision (Brit Milah) — On the 8th day. The physical sign of the covenant.

Key Theological Points

  • God is one. Absolutely, indivisibly one.
  • No incarnation. God does not take human form. Ever.
  • Jews are "chosen" for obligation, not superiority.
  • Afterlife is deliberately vague. Focus is on this world.
  • Messiah has NOT come. Jesus did not fulfill the criteria.

Major Branches

Orthodox
Full observance of halakha. Torah is literally God's word.
Conservative
Halakha is binding but evolves. Historical-critical approach to text.
Reform
Individual autonomy. Torah is divinely inspired but not literally dictated.
Hasidic / Haredi
Strictest observance. Mystical tradition (Kabbalah). Distinct dress, insularity.

Christianity — Grace & Incarnation

Christianity is built on a claim no other Abrahamic religion makes: God became a human being.

Core Framework

  • The Trinity — One God in three persons: Father, Son (Jesus), Holy Spirit. This is the central mystery and the primary reason Judaism and Islam reject Christianity's monotheistic claim.
  • Incarnation — God became flesh in Jesus. Fully God AND fully human.
  • Atonement — Jesus's death is a sacrificial payment for human sin. God dies to save humanity from itself.
  • Resurrection — Jesus physically rose from the dead. The non-negotiable. Paul: "If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile."
  • Salvation by grace — Humans cannot earn their way to God. Salvation is a gift. (Exact mechanics drove the Reformation.)
  • Original sin — All humans inherit Adam's fallen nature. Judaism and Islam reject this entirely.

Major Branches

Catholic (~1.3B)
Pope as head. Apostolic succession. Seven sacraments. Tradition + scripture share authority.
Eastern Orthodox (~220M)
Split from Rome in 1054. Patriarch-led. Heavy emphasis on mysticism, liturgy, icons.
Protestant (~900M)
Split from Rome in 1517. Scripture alone. No Pope. Enormous internal diversity.

Islam — Submission & Finality

Islam means "submission" to God's will. The theology is deliberately simple — no priesthood, no sacraments, no intermediary, no mystery of the Trinity.

The Five Pillars

1
Shahada
Declaration of faith. "There is no god but God, and Muhammad is His messenger." Saying this sincerely makes you Muslim.
2
Salat
Five daily prayers at prescribed times, facing Mecca. Preceded by ritual washing.
3
Zakat
Mandatory charity — 2.5% of accumulated wealth annually. A religious tax, not optional generosity.
4
Sawm
Fasting during Ramadan. No food, drink, smoking, or sex from dawn to sunset for 29–30 days.
5
Hajj
Pilgrimage to Mecca at least once, if able. All pilgrims wear identical white — king and peasant are equal before God.

The Six Articles of Faith

1
God (Allah)
One, indivisible, without partners or form. 99 Names describe attributes.
2
Angels
Created from light. Gabriel is chief. No free will.
3
Revealed Scriptures
Torah, Psalms, Gospel, Quran — all from God. Earlier books corrupted. Only Quran preserved.
4
Prophets
Adam through Muhammad (~124,000 total). Muhammad is the final prophet.
5
Day of Judgment
Every soul judged. Deeds weighed on a literal scale. Heaven and Hell are real.
6
Divine Predestination
God knows and has decreed everything. Tension with free will is Islam's oldest debate.

Major Branches

Sunni (~85–90%)
Authority passed to elected caliphs. Quran + Hadith + scholarly consensus. Four legal schools.
Shia (~10–15%)
Authority should have passed to Ali and descendants. Own hadith collections. Clerical hierarchy.
Sufi
Not a sect but a mystical tradition within both Sunni and Shia — direct experience of God through meditation and poetry.

How the Three Relate to Each Other

Concept Judaism Christianity Islam
GodOne, indivisibleOne God, three persons (Trinity)One, indivisible
JesusNot the MessiahGod incarnate. Messiah. Savior.Major prophet & Messiah, not divine
Original SinNoYes — inherited from AdamNo
SalvationCovenant obedience + repentanceGrace through faith in ChristSubmission + good deeds
AfterlifeMinimal / ambiguousCentral (heaven/hell)Central (heaven/hell)
ScriptureTorah is God's wordBible is inspired (varies)Quran is God's literal, unaltered word
ClergyRabbis (teachers, not priests)Ordained priests/pastorsNo clergy (Sunni) / hierarchy (Shia)
AbrahamFounding patriarch of covenantAncestor of faithBuilt the Ka'ba with Ishmael
MessiahHas not come yetHas come (Jesus), will returnHas come (Jesus), will return + Mahdi
Earlier ScriptureN/A (is the earliest)OT fulfilled by NewTorah & Gospel corrupted; Quran corrects

Sacred Texts — Who Wrote What, When, and How Close Were They?

Every religion claims divine authority for its scripture. But the human hands that wrote, compiled, and edited these texts operated at vastly different distances from the events described.

The Torah (Pentateuch)
Judaism
Traditional Author
Moses
Traditional Date
~1250 BCE (at Sinai)
Scholarly Date
~900–400 BCE (compiled over centuries)

Traditional claim: God dictated the Torah to Moses at Mount Sinai. Moses wrote all five books (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy). Orthodox Judaism still holds this position.

Scholarly view: The Torah is a composite document woven from at least four literary sources — the Documentary Hypothesis identifies the Jahwist (J, ~950 BCE), Elohist (E, ~850 BCE), Deuteronomist (D, ~620 BCE), and Priestly (P, ~500 BCE) sources. A final redactor assembled them into the text we have, likely during or after the Babylonian Exile (~586–400 BCE). The evidence: duplicate stories told differently (two creation accounts, two flood narratives), contradictory laws, shifts in divine naming (YHWH vs. Elohim), and distinct vocabularies and theological concerns.

Distance from events: If the Exodus happened at all (~1250 BCE), the earliest written source is ~300 years later. The Patriarchal narratives (~2000–1700 BCE) were written 800–1,500+ years after the events described. Genesis describes the creation of the universe.

Bottom line: The Torah describes events spanning from the creation of the world to Moses's death. The oldest identifiable written layer dates to ~950 BCE. Even if Moses existed exactly as described, the text contains material he could not have written (including his own death in Deuteronomy 34).
The Talmud
Judaism
Authors
Generations of rabbis (~200 BCE–500 CE)
Compiled
Mishnah ~200 CE / Babylonian Talmud ~500 CE
Relationship to Events
Records centuries of legal debate, not narrative history

What it is: Not a narrative scripture like the Torah. The Talmud is a record of rabbinic argument — the Mishnah (law code) plus the Gemara (commentary, debate, tangents). 2.5 million words, 63 tractates. It covers everything: civil law, ritual, ethics, medicine, folklore, and vigorous disagreement. The disagreements are preserved because the process of arguing is the sacred act.

Who wrote it: Hundreds of named rabbis across centuries. The Mishnah was compiled by Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi (~200 CE). The Gemara accumulated through academies in Babylon and Palestine over the next 300 years. No single author — it's an institutional product.

Bottom line: The Talmud doesn't claim to be God's direct word. It claims to be the Oral Torah — the interpretive tradition that accompanies the Written Torah. Its authority derives from the chain of transmission from Sinai, not from a single moment of revelation.
The New Testament
Christianity

Paul's Letters (Epistles)

Author
Paul of Tarsus (7 undisputed; 6 disputed)
Written
~50–60 CE
Distance from Events
~20–30 years after crucifixion

Relationship to Jesus: Paul never met Jesus during his lifetime. He persecuted early Christians, then converted after a visionary experience (~35 CE). His knowledge of Jesus comes from visions, from conversations with Peter and James (Jesus's brother), and from early church tradition — not from personal witness of Jesus's ministry.

What they contain: Theology, church governance, ethics. Surprisingly little about Jesus's life or teachings. Paul focuses almost entirely on the meaning of Christ's death and resurrection, not on what Jesus said or did during his ministry. He quotes Jesus directly only a handful of times.

Bottom line: The earliest Christian documents, and the closest to the events (~20 years). But written by someone who never witnessed those events and whose theology sometimes diverges from what the later Gospels attribute to Jesus.

The Gospels

Traditional Authors
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John (apostles / companions)
Written
~70–100 CE
Distance from Events
~40–70 years after crucifixion

Traditional claim: Written by eyewitnesses or their close associates. Matthew and John were apostles. Mark was Peter's scribe. Luke was Paul's companion.

Scholarly view: All four Gospels are anonymous — the author names were added later (late 2nd century). Written in Greek by educated authors, not Aramaic-speaking Galilean fishermen. Mark (~70 CE) is earliest and was used as a source by both Matthew and Luke. Matthew and Luke also share a hypothetical source called "Q" (from German Quelle, "source") — a lost collection of Jesus's sayings. John (~90–100 CE) is theologically distinct and likely represents a separate tradition.

Key problem: The Gospels disagree on significant details. Was Jesus born in Bethlehem (Matthew, Luke) or is that theological? Different genealogies. Different resurrection accounts. Different last words on the cross. The theological agendas of each author shaped what they included and how they told it.

Bottom line: Written 40–70 years after the events by authors whose identities are uncertain, in a language Jesus didn't speak, drawing on oral traditions that had been shaped by decades of community retelling. Not transcripts — theological portraits.

Revelation & Other Texts

Revelation (~95 CE): Written by "John" (probably not the same John as the Gospel). Apocalyptic vision of the end times. Its inclusion in the canon was disputed for centuries. Acts (~80–90 CE): By the author of Luke's Gospel. History of the early church, especially Paul's missions. General Epistles (James, Jude, 1–2 Peter, 1–3 John): Attributed to apostles. Most scholars consider several pseudepigraphic (written by later followers using the apostle's name — a common and accepted practice in the ancient world).

The Quran
Islam
Traditional Author
God (Allah), via Gabriel, recited by Muhammad
Revealed
610–632 CE (23 years)
Compiled / Standardized
~634 CE (Abu Bakr) / ~650 CE (Uthman)

Traditional claim: Muhammad is not the author — he is the vessel. The Quran is God's literal speech, transmitted through the angel Gabriel, recited verbatim by Muhammad. Muhammad was illiterate (ummi), which is theologically important: he couldn't have composed it himself. The Arabic is divine and untranslatable in the strict sense.

Compilation: During Muhammad's life, verses were memorized by companions and written on whatever was available (palm leaves, bones, leather). After his death, Abu Bakr ordered the first compilation (~634). Caliph Uthman standardized it (~650) and burned all variant copies. The Uthmanic codex is the text used today.

Scholarly view: The Quran is generally dated to the early-to-mid 7th century, consistent with the traditional timeline. The Sana'a palimpsest (discovered 1972) shows minor textual variants in a pre-Uthmanic layer — evidence that the text wasn't perfectly frozen before standardization. The Quran's content shows familiarity with Jewish, Christian, and local Arabian traditions; its retellings of biblical stories often follow Talmudic and apocryphal versions rather than canonical biblical ones.

Relationship to events: The Quran is unique among these texts — it doesn't primarily narrate events. It's God speaking in real time to Muhammad's situation. When it references historical events (Badr, Uhud), it's commentary, not reportage. The biographical details of Muhammad's life come from hadith and sira, not the Quran itself.

Bottom line: Of all the Abrahamic scriptures, the Quran has the shortest gap between the events/revelations and the written text (~20 years from Muhammad's death to Uthman's codex). But the burning of variants means we can't fully compare the standardized text to what came before. The Sana'a palimpsest is the closest we get.
The Hadith Collections
Islam
Major Compilers (Sunni)
Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Dawud, Tirmidhi, Nasa'i, Ibn Majah
Compiled
~810–890 CE
Distance from Events
~200–250 years after Muhammad

What they are: Collections of Muhammad's sayings, actions, and tacit approvals — transmitted orally through chains of narrators (isnad) for generations before being written down. Each hadith = a chain of transmission + the content itself.

The credibility issue: Bukhari reportedly examined ~600,000 hadiths and accepted ~7,000 — rejecting ~99% as unreliable or fabricated. Political factions, legal schools, and theological movements had enormous incentives to manufacture hadiths supporting their positions. This isn't a modern critical observation — Islamic scholars themselves acknowledged the fabrication problem, which is why the science of hadith authentication (ilm al-hadith) became one of Islam's most sophisticated intellectual disciplines.

Sunni vs. Shia: They use entirely different collections. Sunni canon: Bukhari, Muslim, and four others. Shia canon: al-Kafi, Man La Yahduruhu al-Faqih, Tahdhib al-Ahkam, al-Istibsar. The hadiths that support Shia claims about Ali's succession don't appear in Sunni collections, and vice versa. Each side accuses the other of selectively transmitting and suppressing material.

Bottom line: The hadith are to Islam what the Talmud is to Judaism — the interpretive/legal layer built on top of the primary revelation. But the hadiths claim to record actual events and statements, and they were compiled 200+ years after the fact from oral chains. The gap is comparable to the Gospels' distance from Jesus.

Distance from Events — At a Glance

TextEvents DescribedWhen Written / Compiled
Torah Creation → Moses's death (~1250 BCE) ~950–400 BCE. Gap: 300–1,500+ years (to earliest described events). Multiple anonymous authors over centuries.
Talmud Rabbinic legal debates (~200 BCE–500 CE) ~200–500 CE. Records its own era — minimal gap. Hundreds of named rabbis.
Paul's Letters Theology of Christ's death/resurrection (~30 CE) ~50–60 CE. Gap: ~20–30 years. Author never met Jesus.
Gospels Jesus's life, ministry, death (~4 BCE–30 CE) ~70–100 CE. Gap: ~40–70 years. Anonymous authors, not eyewitnesses.
Quran God's speech to Muhammad (610–632 CE) Standardized ~650 CE. Gap: ~18 years from Muhammad's death. Variants burned.
Hadith Muhammad's sayings/actions (610–632 CE) ~810–890 CE. Gap: ~200–250 years. Oral transmission. ~99% rejected by compilers.

The Covenants — Every Deal Made Between God and Man

A covenant (Hebrew: brit; Arabic: mithaq/ahd) is a binding agreement between God and humans. These are the structural backbone of all three Abrahamic religions. Each tradition inherits, reinterprets, or claims to supersede the covenants that came before.

The Primordial Covenant
Before creation
Islam
Parties
God and every human soul that will ever exist
Source
Quran 7:172
Terms
Before creation, God gathered all future souls and asked: "Am I not your Lord?" All souls answered: "Yes, we testify."
Sign
The fitrah — every human is born with an innate recognition of God. Disbelief is a forgetting, not a natural state.

This is unique to Islam. It means every human being has already agreed to God's sovereignty — before birth, before history. Sin isn't inherited (no original sin); instead, it's a failure to remember what you already know.

Judaism
No equivalent concept.
Christianity
No equivalent. Christianity has original sin — humans are born fallen, not born knowing God.
The Adamic Covenant
Creation
JudaismChristianityIslam
Parties
God and Adam (& Eve)
Source
Genesis 1–3; Quran 2:30–39, 7:19–25
Terms
Dominion over the earth. Don't eat from the forbidden tree. Adam and Eve eat it.
Consequence of Breaking
Expulsion from Eden. Mortality. Toil and pain.
Judaism
Adam sinned but sin is not inherited. Each person is born morally neutral and responsible for their own choices.
Christianity
Original sin. Adam's fall corrupts all humanity. Every person is born with a sinful nature. This is the problem Christ's death solves. Augustine formalized this; it's foundational to Western Christianity.
Islam
Adam sinned, repented, and was forgiven. (Quran 2:37). No inherited guilt. The story is a lesson about human weakness, not a cosmic fall requiring divine sacrifice.
The Noahic Covenant
After the Flood
JudaismChristianityIslam
Parties
God and all of humanity (through Noah)
Source
Genesis 9:1–17; Quran 11:25–49
God's Promise
Never again destroy the earth by flood. Be fruitful and multiply. You may eat meat (not blood).
Sign
The rainbow.
Judaism
The basis of the Noahide Laws — 7 universal moral laws that apply to all humanity, not just Jews: no idolatry, no blasphemy, no murder, no theft, no sexual immorality, no eating flesh from a living animal, establish courts of justice. Judaism's framework for righteous non-Jews.
Christianity
A universal covenant, still in effect. Often read as a foreshadowing of God's mercy — the pattern of judgment followed by grace that culminates in Christ.
Islam
Noah (Nuh) is a major prophet. The flood story is told multiple times in the Quran. The covenant isn't structurally central — Islam emphasizes the Primordial Covenant and Muhammad's final message instead.
The Abrahamic Covenant
~2000 BCE (traditional)
JudaismChristianityIslam
Parties
God and Abraham (and his descendants)
Source
Genesis 12, 15, 17; Quran 2:124–131
God's Promises
Land (Canaan). Descendants as numerous as stars. Blessing to all nations through Abraham. An everlasting covenant.
Sign
Circumcision — for all males on the 8th day (Genesis 17). The physical mark of belonging.
The Fork in the Road
This is where the three religions diverge most sharply. Abraham has two sons: Ishmael (by Hagar) and Isaac (by Sarah). Which son carries the covenant forward determines which civilization is "chosen."
Judaism
The covenant passes through Isaac → Jacob → the 12 tribes of Israel. The land promise = Canaan/Israel. Circumcision remains obligatory. This is the foundational covenant of Jewish identity.
Christianity
Paul reinterprets: Abraham was justified by faith, not law (Romans 4, Galatians 3). Christians are "Abraham's spiritual descendants." The promise to bless all nations = fulfilled in Christ. Physical circumcision replaced by baptism.
Islam
Abraham (Ibrahim) is the first Muslim — one who "submitted" to God. The covenant passes through Ishmael to the Arab people and ultimately to Muhammad. Abraham and Ishmael built the Ka'ba in Mecca (Quran 2:127). Islam = restoration of Abraham's original monotheism, not a new religion.
The Mosaic (Sinai) Covenant
~1250 BCE (traditional)
JudaismChristianity
Parties
God and the nation of Israel (through Moses)
Source
Exodus 19–24; Deuteronomy 5–28
Terms
The Torah — 613 commandments. "If you obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my treasured possession." Blessings for obedience, curses for disobedience.
Sign
The Sabbath (Exodus 31:13–17). Also the tablets of stone, the Ark of the Covenant, and the entire sacrificial/Temple system.

This is the most detailed covenant — it's essentially a national constitution. It includes the Ten Commandments as the anchor, plus 603 additional laws covering diet, sex, property, war, worship, agriculture, hygiene, and social justice.

Judaism
Still fully in effect. The Sinai covenant is the core of Jewish obligation. The 613 mitzvot are binding. This is what makes Judaism Judaism.
Christianity
Superseded by the New Covenant in Christ. Paul argues the Law was a "guardian" until Christ came (Galatians 3:24). Christians are "not under law but under grace" (Romans 6:14). The moral law (Ten Commandments) remains; the ritual/ceremonial law (dietary rules, sacrifices) does not. This is the sharpest theological break between Judaism and Christianity.
Islam
Moses (Musa) received a genuine revelation from God, but the Torah text was later corrupted (tahrif). The original Sinai covenant was valid; the version Jews have now is unreliable. Islam's sharia replaces it.
The Priestly (Levitical) Covenant
Sinai
Judaism
Parties
God and Aaron / the tribe of Levi
Source
Numbers 25:10–13; Malachi 2:4–7; Nehemiah 13:29
Terms
An eternal priesthood granted to Aaron's descendants. They alone perform Temple sacrifices, maintain the sanctuary, and mediate between God and Israel.
Status Today
Functionally suspended since the Temple's destruction in 70 CE. No Temple = no sacrifices = no active priesthood. But Kohanim (priestly families) still have special roles in synagogue ritual, and the covenant is considered dormant, not void.
Christianity
Christ is the final high priest (Hebrews 4–10). He replaces the Levitical priesthood permanently. His sacrifice on the cross replaces all Temple sacrifices — once, for all.
The Davidic Covenant
~1000 BCE
JudaismChristianity
Parties
God and King David (and his dynasty)
Source
2 Samuel 7:8–16; Psalm 89
God's Promise
"Your throne shall be established forever." An eternal dynasty. A descendant of David will always rule. Unconditional — God will discipline David's descendants but never revoke the promise.
The Problem
The Davidic dynasty ended with the Babylonian Exile (586 BCE). No Davidic king has ruled since. This creates the messianic expectation — the future Messiah must be a descendant of David who restores the throne.
Judaism
The Messiah (Mashiach) has not come. He will be a human descendant of David who rebuilds the Temple, gathers the exiles, and establishes universal peace. Jesus did none of these things.
Christianity
Jesus is the promised Davidic king. Both Matthew and Luke provide genealogies connecting Jesus to David (though the genealogies don't match). The "eternal throne" is spiritual, not political — the Kingdom of God, not a literal monarchy.
Islam
David (Dawud) was a prophet-king who received the Psalms (Zabur). Islam acknowledges the Davidic tradition but doesn't center messianic expectation on it. The Mahdi is not specifically Davidic.
The New Covenant Prophecy
~626 BCE
JudaismChristianity
Source
Jeremiah 31:31–34
The Prophecy
"I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel... I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts... they shall all know me, from the least to the greatest."
The Most Contested Verse in Interfaith Debate
This single passage in Jeremiah is the hinge on which the entire Christian claim of supersession rests. What does "new covenant" mean? A replacement? A renewal? A deepening?
Judaism
A renewed covenant, not a replacement. The same Torah, but internalized — written on hearts instead of tablets. This describes a future messianic era when obedience becomes effortless, not the abolition of the Law. The word in Hebrew (chadasha) can mean "new" or "renewed."
Christianity
This is exactly what Jesus established. At the Last Supper: "This cup is the new covenant in my blood" (Luke 22:20). The book of Hebrews quotes Jeremiah 31 extensively to argue the Mosaic covenant is obsolete: "In speaking of a new covenant, he makes the first one obsolete" (Hebrews 8:13). The entire New Testament (testament = covenant) is named after this.
The New Covenant in Christ
~30 CE
Christianity
Parties
God and all who believe in Christ
Source
Luke 22:20; 1 Corinthians 11:25; Hebrews 8–10; Romans 3–8
Terms
Salvation through faith in Christ's sacrificial death. His blood = the new covenant. Replaces animal sacrifice. Replaces the Mosaic law as the mechanism of right relationship with God. Open to all humanity, not just Israel.
Sign
Baptism (replaces circumcision) and the Eucharist/Communion ("Do this in remembrance of me").

This is the covenant that makes Christianity a separate religion rather than a Jewish sect. By declaring the Mosaic covenant superseded, Paul and the early church opened membership to the entire Gentile world without requiring Torah observance. This is both Christianity's founding move and the source of its deepest conflict with Judaism.

Judaism
Rejected entirely. God's covenant with Israel at Sinai is eternal and irrevocable. A human sacrifice violates Torah law. No individual can atone for another's sins through death. Jesus did not fulfill the messianic criteria. The claim of supersession is seen as theological imperialism.
Islam
Jesus (Isa) was a genuine prophet who received a genuine revelation (the Injil/Gospel). But he did not die on the cross (a substitute was crucified — Quran 4:157), so the entire sacrificial/atonement framework is based on a false premise. God simply forgives directly — no blood covenant needed.
The Final Covenant — Muhammad & the Quran
610–632 CE
Islam
Parties
God and all of humanity (through Muhammad, the final prophet)
Source
Quran 5:3; 33:40; 3:19
Terms
Submit to God's will as revealed in the Quran. Follow the Five Pillars. Muhammad is the Seal of the Prophets — no prophet comes after. "Today I have perfected your religion for you" (5:3).
Relationship to Earlier Covenants
Islam claims to restore, not replace — Abraham's original monotheism, before Judaism and Christianity corrupted it. Every previous prophet (Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, Jesus) taught Islam. They all "submitted." Muhammad's message is the final, uncorrupted version.
Judaism
Rejected. God's covenant with Israel is eternal. Muhammad is not recognized as a prophet. The Quran's retellings of Torah narratives contain errors (by Jewish reckoning), undermining the claim of divine authorship.
Christianity
Rejected. The New Covenant in Christ is final. Muhammad is not recognized as a prophet. The Quran's denial of the crucifixion contradicts the foundational event of Christianity.

The Chain of Claims

The Pattern
Each tradition claims to be the rightful heir of the original covenant with God — and each accuses the others of getting it wrong:

Judaism: God's covenant with Israel at Sinai is eternal. Neither Christ nor Muhammad can revoke it. We're still waiting for the Messiah.

Christianity: Christ fulfilled and superseded the Sinai covenant. The Mosaic law was a temporary measure. The New Covenant is open to all humanity. Islam came later and got Jesus wrong.

Islam: Every prophet from Adam to Jesus taught submission to God (islam). Jews and Christians corrupted the message. Muhammad restored the original Abrahamic faith. The Quran is the final, uncorrupted word. Case closed.

Each religion reads the same patriarchal history and arrives at irreconcilable conclusions. The covenants don't just define each faith — they define each faith's claim to exclusive legitimacy.
PART II

Islam — Deep Timeline

Pre-Revelation ~570–610 CE

Religious Narrative
~570
Muhammad born in Mecca to the Quraysh tribe (Banu Hashim clan). Father Abdullah dies before birth. Tradition says miraculous signs accompany his birth.
~576
Mother Amina dies. Raised by grandfather, then uncle Abu Talib. Orphan status is theologically significant — God protects him directly.
~583
Travels to Syria. Christian monk Bahira recognizes signs of prophethood — a "seal" between his shoulders.
~595
Marries Khadijah, a wealthy widow merchant 15 years his senior. She proposed to him. His most important early supporter.
~605
Mediates the Black Stone dispute. Known as "al-Amin" (the trustworthy).
600s
Retreats regularly to Cave of Hira for contemplation. Growing dissatisfaction with Meccan polytheism and social injustice.
Historical Record
~570
Birth year is traditional, not documented. No contemporary records of Muhammad's birth or childhood exist.
Pre-610
No surviving documents mention Muhammad before his prophetic career. The Bahira story is considered legendary by most historians.
Context
Mecca was a trading town and pilgrimage center (Ka'ba housed ~360 idols). Judaism and Christianity were well-established in Arabia — Jewish tribes in Medina, Christian communities in Yemen and border kingdoms.
Sources
No independent verification of Khadijah, Abu Talib, or any pre-revelation detail. All come from Islamic sources written 100–200+ years later (Ibn Ishaq's Sira, ~760s CE).

The Revelation Period — Mecca ~610–622 CE

Religious Narrative
610
Angel Jibril (Gabriel) appears in Cave Hira. Squeezes Muhammad three times, commands: "Iqra!" (Read/Recite). First verses: Surah Al-Alaq 96:1-5. Muhammad is terrified.
610
Khadijah reassures him. Her cousin Waraqa (a Christian) confirms this is the same spirit that came to Moses.
610–613
"Secret" phase. First converts: Khadijah, Ali (~10 yrs old), Abu Bakr, Zayd ibn Harithah (freed slave).
613
Public preaching begins. Core message: strict monotheism, social justice, care for orphans, Day of Judgment.
614–615
Quraysh persecution intensifies. Bilal tortured. First migration to Abyssinia (Christian Ethiopia). The Negus protects them.
619
"Year of Sorrow." Khadijah and Abu Talib both die. Muhammad loses his emotional anchor and tribal protection.
620
Isra and Mi'raj (Night Journey). Transported from Mecca to Jerusalem, then ascends through seven heavens. Meets Abraham, Moses, Jesus. Five daily prayers established.
620–622
Delegations from Yathrib (Medina) pledge allegiance at Aqaba. Invite Muhammad to arbitrate their tribal conflicts.
Historical Record
610–622
No contemporary documentation of any of these events. No Meccan inscription, no foreign reference.
Quran
The Meccan suras (shorter, more poetic, apocalyptic) are generally accepted as earlier than Medinan suras (longer, more legal). Internal evidence supports a two-phase composition.
Isra/Mi'raj
Historians note parallels with earlier ascension literature (Book of Enoch, Ascension of Isaiah, Paul's "third heaven" in 2 Corinthians).
Abyssinia
Plausible — Ethiopia had a Christian kingdom (Aksum). No Aksumite records confirm it.
Mecca
Patricia Crone's revisionist work (1987) challenged whether Mecca was actually a major trade center. Her strongest claims have been partially walked back.

The Medina Period ~622–630 CE

Religious Narrative
622
The Hijra. Muhammad and Abu Bakr secretly emigrate. Ali sleeps in Muhammad's bed as decoy. This marks Year 1 of the Islamic calendar.
622
Constitution of Medina. Charter uniting Muslim emigrants, Medinan converts, and Jewish tribes into one community (ummah).
624
Battle of Badr. ~313 Muslims defeat ~1,000 Quraysh. Interpreted as divine intervention. Foundational Muslim identity moment.
625
Battle of Uhud. Muslims suffer setback. Muhammad wounded. Quran attributes defeat to disobedience.
627
Battle of the Trench. Quraysh besiege Medina. Muslims dig defensive trench. Siege fails.
628
Treaty of Hudaybiyyah. 10-year truce with Quraysh. Appears unfavorable but Quran calls it "a clear victory."
Historical Record
622
The Hijra is the best-anchored date in Muhammad's biography. Islamic calendar begins here; external sources eventually reference it.
622
Constitution of Medina — most scholars accept it as an authentic early document. Its language appears archaic relative to later Islamic legal writing.
Battles
No contemporary non-Muslim sources describe Badr, Uhud, or the Trench. Archeologically invisible (small-scale). Details vary across hadith and sira accounts.
~634–640s
First non-Muslim references to Muhammad appear. The Doctrina Jacobi (~634 CE) mentions a Saracen prophet "armed with a sword."

Muhammad & the Jewish Tribes ~622–627 CE

Religious Narrative
622
Muhammad arrives in Medina, home to three major Jewish tribes: Banu Qaynuqa, Banu Nadir, Banu Qurayza. Expects them to recognize him as the final prophet in their tradition.
622–623
Early alignment with Jewish practice. Muslims pray toward Jerusalem. Muhammad fasts on Ashura (paralleling Yom Kippur).
623
Jewish scholars reject his prophetic claims. Quranic retellings of biblical stories diverge from Torah in disqualifying ways.
623
Qibla changed from Jerusalem to Mecca. The theological divorce from Judaism — Islam reframed as restoration of Abraham's original monotheism.
624
Banu Qaynuqa expelled. Property confiscated.
625
Banu Nadir expelled after alleged assassination plot.
627
Banu Qurayza accused of siding with Quraysh. Men executed (400–900), women and children enslaved.
Note: Muhammad never claimed to be the Messiah — in Islam, that title belongs to Jesus. He claimed to be the Seal of the Prophets.
Historical Record
Context
Jewish presence confirmed. Attested in pre-Islamic Arabic poetry and South Arabian inscriptions. They spoke Arabic and were culturally Arabized.
Rejection
Plausible: a non-Jewish prophetic claimant with divergent scripture would face skepticism from literate scholars. The Quran's own polemics serve as evidence the rejection occurred.
Qurayza
Account comes primarily from Ibn Ishaq (~760s). Some scholars (Arafat) question the numbers. Others (Kister, Scholler) defend the broad outline. No external corroboration.
Pattern
The dynamic mirrors early Christianity's break with Judaism. Jesus and Paul also claimed the Jewish prophetic heritage, faced rejection, and the resulting texts contain increasingly polemical rhetoric. Structurally similar across centuries.

Conquest of Mecca & Final Years ~630–632 CE

Religious Narrative
630
Conquest of Mecca. 10,000 followers. City surrenders with minimal bloodshed. Muhammad enters the Ka'ba, destroys all idols. General amnesty declared.
631
"Year of Delegations." Tribes across Arabia pledge allegiance.
632
Farewell Pilgrimage. ~100,000+ followers. Delivers Farewell Sermon: sanctity of life, equality regardless of race, rights of women, prohibition of usury.
632
"Today I have perfected your religion for you" (5:3). Final revelation.
June 8, 632
Muhammad dies in Medina, in Aisha's apartment. Abu Bakr: "Whoever worshipped Muhammad, know that Muhammad is dead. Whoever worshipped God, know that God is alive and never dies."
Historical Record
630s
The rapid Arab conquest of Byzantine Syria and Sassanid Iraq (634–651) is extremely well-documented by multiple independent sources. Confirms a unified Muslim polity existed by 632.
632
The succession crisis (Abu Bakr vs. Ali) is well-attested across both Sunni and Shia sources. Its authenticity is not seriously questioned.
Evidence
Earliest Islamic coins ~690s CE. Dome of the Rock (691 CE) contains Quranic text. PERF 558 papyrus (~642 CE) is the earliest dated Islamic document.

The Succession Crisis & Sunni-Shia Split ~632–680 CE

The defining fracture in Islamic history. Everything that follows — theology, law, politics, identity — flows from what happened in the hours and decades after Muhammad died.

The Core Question
Muhammad died without unambiguously naming a successor. Or did he? That question is the split.
The Shia Case ("The Betrayal")
632
Ghadir Khumm. Weeks before death, Muhammad publicly takes Ali's hand: "Whoever I am his mawla, Ali is his mawla." Shia: this is explicit designation. Mawla = master/leader. Case closed.
Ali was the first male convert, Muhammad's cousin, married to his daughter Fatimah, father of his only surviving grandsons, most knowledgeable companion.
When Muhammad died, Ali was washing the body — while others seized power at Saqifah.
The Sunni Case
632
Mawla at Ghadir Khumm means "friend" or "supporter," not political successor. Muhammad was asking the community to love Ali.
Muhammad never explicitly named a successor, intentionally leaving it to shura (community consultation).
Abu Bakr was Muhammad's closest companion, his father-in-law, and the man Muhammad chose to lead prayers when too ill — a clear signal of trust.

The Four "Rightly Guided" Caliphs

Sunnis revere all four. Shia view the first three as usurpers.

  • Elected at Saqifah by a hastily assembled group while Ali was preparing Muhammad's burial.
  • Ali and Fatimah refuse allegiance. Fatimah claims inheritance of Fadak; Abu Bakr denies it. Fatimah dies ~6 months later, estranged. A massive wound in Shia memory.
  • Fights the Ridda Wars (Wars of Apostasy). Reunifies Arabia by force.
  • Orders first compilation of the Quran. Dies naturally. Appoints Umar.
  • Massive expansion: Syria, Iraq, Egypt, Persia. Jerusalem falls (637). Islamic empire becomes a superpower overnight.
  • Establishes administrative machinery: diwan (treasury), Islamic calendar, garrison cities (Kufa, Basra, Fustat).
  • Known for personal austerity and blunt justice.
  • Assassinated by a Persian slave (Abu Lu'lu'a) in 644. Appoints a six-man shura. Ali is on it but loses out.
  • Chosen over Ali by shura. Wealthy, from the powerful Umayyad clan.
  • Standardizes the Quran (Uthmanic codex). All variant copies burned.
  • Accused of nepotism — fills governorships with Umayyad relatives, including cousin Muawiya in Syria.
  • 656 — Murdered by rebels while reading the Quran. First caliph assassinated. The ummah's unity is shattered.
  • Finally becomes caliph — 24 years after Muhammad's death.
  • Battle of the Camel (656) — Aisha, Talha, and Zubayr rebel. Ali wins. First Muslim-on-Muslim war.
  • Battle of Siffin (657) — Muawiya refuses to recognize Ali. Inconclusive battle. Muawiya's men raise Qurans on spears demanding arbitration.
  • The Kharijites — a faction of Ali's own supporters rebels, furious he agreed to negotiate: "Judgment belongs to God alone."
  • 661 — Assassinated by a Kharijite with a poisoned sword while praying.

The Umayyad Takeover & Karbala

October 10, 680 — Karbala
Yazid's army (4,000+) intercepts Husayn's small caravan (~72 fighters plus women and children) at Karbala, Iraq. Cut off from water for days. Then slaughtered. Husayn is killed and beheaded. His head is sent to Yazid in Damascus.

Karbala is the emotional and theological core of Shia Islam. Commemorated every year during Ashura with mourning processions and passion plays. "Every day is Ashura, every land is Karbala."

The Twelve Imams

Twelver Shiism (~85% of all Shia, dominant in Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Bahrain) holds that leadership belongs to twelve divinely appointed Imams from Muhammad's family.

#ImamRelationLivedFate
1Ali ibn Abi TalibCousin & son-in-law600–661Assassinated (Kharijite)
2Hasan ibn AliAli's son624–670Poisoned (attr. Muawiya)
3Husayn ibn AliAli's son626–680Killed at Karbala
4Ali Zayn al-AbidinHusayn's son658–713Poisoned (attr. Umayyads)
5Muhammad al-BaqirZayn al-Abidin's son677–733Poisoned (attr. Umayyads)
6Ja'far al-SadiqAl-Baqir's son702–765Poisoned (attr. Abbasids)
7Musa al-KadhimAl-Sadiq's son745–799Poisoned in prison
8Ali al-RidhaAl-Kadhim's son765–818Poisoned (attr. al-Ma'mun)
9Muhammad al-JawadAl-Ridha's son811–835Poisoned (attr. Abbasids)
10Ali al-HadiAl-Jawad's son827–868Poisoned (attr. Abbasids)
11Hasan al-AskariAl-Hadi's son846–874Poisoned (attr. Abbasids)
12Muhammad al-MahdiAl-Askari's sonBorn ~868Occultation (~874). Alive and hidden. Will return.
Iran's Constitution
The Islamic Republic explicitly governs "in the absence of the Hidden Imam." The 12th Imam's occultation is the basis of Shia messianic expectation — structurally parallel to the Christian Second Coming and Jewish messianic hope.

The Quran — Composition & Compilation

Religious Narrative
610–632
Quran revealed piecemeal over 23 years. Companions memorize and write on palm leaves, leather, shoulder bones, stone tablets.
632–634
After Battle of Yamama (many memorizers killed), Abu Bakr orders Zayd ibn Thabit to compile a master copy.
644–656
Under Uthman, variant readings emerge. Standardization project produces the Uthmanic codex. All variant copies burned.
Theology
The Quran is the eternal, uncreated word of God. It exists in a "Preserved Tablet" in heaven. The Arabic is divinely protected from corruption.
Historical Record
MSS
Radiocarbon dating of early manuscripts (Birmingham, Sana'a) returns dates as early as 568–645 CE. Consistent but wide confidence intervals.
Sana'a
Sana'a palimpsest (discovered 1972). Lower text shows minor variants from standard text — different word order, synonyms. Most significant evidence of pre-standardization textual diversity.
Oral
The Quran's structure (repetition, formulaic phrases, rhyming prose/saj') is consistent with oral composition. The medium shaped the form.
Sources
Contains reworkings of biblical and extra-biblical material (Seven Sleepers, Talmudic elements, Infancy Gospel of Thomas). Islamic theology: God retelling the same truths. Secular scholarship: evidence of the religious milieu.

Islamic Textual Authority — Three Tiers

TIER 1 — HIGHEST AUTHORITY
Quran
God's literal words. Not Muhammad's thoughts. God spoke through Gabriel, Gabriel spoke to Muhammad, Muhammad recited exactly what he received. A vessel, not an author. The Arabic itself is divine — translations are technically "interpretations," not Qurans.
TIER 2
Hadith Qudsi ("Sacred Hadith")
God's words, but NOT part of the Quran. Muhammad says "God said..." but outside the formal revelation process. God speaking informally. A middle category most non-Muslims don't know about.
TIER 3
Hadith (Prophetic Tradition)
Muhammad speaking as a man. Opinions, rulings, habits. Reported secondhand through oral chains (isnad) for 150–250 years before compilation. Graded: sahih (authentic), hasan (good), da'if (weak), mawdu (fabricated). Bukhari examined ~600,000 and accepted ~7,000 — rejecting ~99%.

Islam — Key Tension Points

TopicReligious PositionHistorical / Critical View
Muhammad's existenceFoundational, detailed biographyBroadly accepted, but earliest detailed sources are 120–200 years later
Quran's preservationPerfectly preserved, letter for letterSana'a palimpsest suggests minor variants existed pre-Uthman
Source materialGod revealed the same truths to all prophetsQuran draws on Jewish, Christian, and Arabian traditions of 7th-century Arabia
Jewish rejectionJews refused out of envy; concealed prophecies about MuhammadNon-Jewish prophetic claimant with divergent scripture faced predictable rejection
Ghadir KhummSunni: praised Ali as friend. Shia: designated Ali as successorThe word mawla is genuinely ambiguous. Both readings are defensible.
KarbalaSunni: tragedy, Husayn erred. Shia: supreme martyrdom against tyrannyHistorically confirmed. Interpretations remain the core fault line.
Twelve ImamsShia: divinely appointed, sinless. Sunni: respected but not chosenHistorical individuals. Divine appointment is theology. Poisoning claims unprovable.
The Hidden ImamAlive in occultation since ~874, will return as MahdiParallels Christian Second Coming and Jewish messianic expectation

Islam — Timeline Summary

~570
Muhammad born (traditional)
610
First revelation — Cave of Hira
613
Public preaching begins
619
Deaths of Khadijah and Abu Talib
620
Isra and Mi'raj (Night Journey)
622
Hijra to Medina — Year 1 AH
623
Qibla changed: Jerusalem → Mecca
624
Banu Qaynuqa expelled / Battle of Badr
627
Battle of the Trench / Banu Qurayza
630
Conquest of Mecca
632
Farewell Pilgrimage / Ghadir Khumm / Muhammad dies
632
Saqifah — Abu Bakr elected. The split begins.
634–644
Umar's caliphate — conquest of Syria, Iraq, Egypt, Persia
656
Uthman assassinated — first caliph murdered
656
Ali becomes caliph / Battle of the Camel
661
Ali assassinated. Muawiya founds Umayyad dynasty.
680
Husayn killed at Karbala
~650
Quran standardized under Uthman
~691
Dome of the Rock — earliest Quranic inscription
~874
12th Imam enters occultation
PART III

Christianity — Deep Timeline

The Life of Jesus ~6 BCE–30 CE

Religious Narrative
~6–4 BCE
Jesus born in Bethlehem to Mary (virgin) and Joseph. Conceived by the Holy Spirit. Magi visit. Herod orders massacre; family flees to Egypt.
~27–29
John the Baptist baptizes Jesus. Holy Spirit descends as a dove. 40 days in the wilderness; Satan tempts him three times.
~27–30
Public ministry. Miracles, 12 disciples. Core message: the Kingdom of God is at hand. Sermon on the Mount is the ethical manifesto.
~30
Triumphal entry. Last Supper — "This is my body... this is my blood." Betrayed by Judas. Tried. Crucified at Golgotha.
~30
Resurrection. Empty tomb on the third day. Appears for 40 days. Ascends into heaven.
Historical Record
Existence
Scholarly consensus: a historical Jesus existed. Josephus (~93 CE) and Tacitus (~116 CE) provide non-Christian references.
Birth
Matthew and Luke give incompatible genealogies and stories. The Quirinius census is historically problematic. Most scholars think birth narratives are theological.
Crucifixion
Widely accepted as historical. A movement would be unlikely to invent a humiliating death for its founder.
Resurrection
Something convinced defeated followers to risk their lives proclaiming Jesus alive. What that was is where history ends and theology begins.
Gospels
Not eyewitness accounts. Written 40–70 years later, in Greek, by authors who may not have known Jesus personally.

The Early Church & Paul ~30–100 CE

Religious Narrative
~33
Pentecost. Holy Spirit descends. Apostles speak in tongues. Peter preaches; 3,000 convert.
~35
Paul's conversion. On the Damascus road, blinding light: "Saul, why do you persecute me?" The most consequential individual conversion in religious history.
~45–58
Paul's missionary journeys. His radical claim: Gentiles need not become Jews first. No circumcision, no dietary laws. This transforms a Jewish sect into a world religion.
~49
Council of Jerusalem. Gentiles exempted from most of Torah. Christianity's break from Judaism formalized.
~64–67
Peter and Paul martyred in Rome under Nero.
70
Romans destroy Jerusalem Temple. Christianity's center shifts permanently to the Gentile world.
Historical Record
Letters
Seven letters are authentically Pauline by virtual scholarly consensus. The hardest evidence for earliest Christianity.
Tension
Paul's letters reveal genuine conflict with James and Peter (Galatians 2). The early church was not unified.
James
James's execution confirmed by Josephus — one of the best-attested early Christian events.
Key insight
Christianity is largely Paul's creation. Jesus preached to Jews about the Kingdom of God. Paul preached to Gentiles about cosmic salvation. Without Paul, Christianity likely dies with the Temple.

Constantine, Councils & the Canon ~100–451 CE

Religious Narrative
312
Constantine's vision. Cross in the sky: "In this sign, conquer." Wins Battle of Milvian Bridge.
313
Edict of Milan. Christianity legalized throughout the Roman Empire.
325
Council of Nicaea. Is Jesus fully God? Yes — "of one substance" with the Father. Nicene Creed produced. Arianism condemned.
367
Athanasius lists the 27-book New Testament canon for the first time.
380
Theodosius makes Christianity the official state religion. Paganism actively suppressed.
381
Council of Constantinople: Holy Spirit declared fully divine. Trinity doctrine complete.
451
Council of Chalcedon. Christ = one person, two natures. Oriental Orthodox churches split off.
Historical Record
Constantine
Historians debate sincerity. Not baptized until deathbed. Continued pagan symbols. Political motivations well-documented.
Nicaea
Well-attested (~300 bishops). But Constantine's involvement made doctrine a matter of state policy.
Canon
Assembled over centuries through usage, debate, and politics. Some books disputed for centuries. Excluded texts lost partly on theological, partly on political grounds.
Reversal
Within 70 years of legalization: from persecuted minority to state religion suppressing paganism. One of the most dramatic reversals in religious history.
Orthodoxy
"Orthodox Christianity" is the winner of a centuries-long competition. Arianism, Gnosticism, Nestorianism all had serious arguments. They lost politically as much as theologically.

The Great Schisms 451–1648 CE

Coptic, Ethiopian, Armenian, Syriac, and Indian churches reject Chalcedon's two-natures formula. They hold Christ has one united nature (miaphysitism). These churches predate Catholicism and Orthodoxy. Modern dialogue suggests the disagreement may be more linguistic than substantive.

Rome vs. Constantinople. Key disputes: Does the Holy Spirit proceed from Father alone (East) or Father "and the Son" (West)? Does the Pope have universal authority? Can priests marry?

The 1204 sack of Constantinople by Western Crusaders made reconciliation impossible. They looted Christian Constantinople, not a Muslim city. The Eastern church has never forgotten.

Martin Luther's 95 Theses — objecting to indulgences, but the revolution goes deeper: salvation by faith alone, scripture alone, priesthood of all believers, no papal infallibility.

Calvin in Geneva (predestination). Henry VIII in England (broke with Rome over a divorce). The Counter-Reformation at the Council of Trent (1545–1563).

The Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) — ~8 million dead. Catholic vs. Protestant. Ends with Peace of Westphalia.

Technology Parallel
The printing press (Gutenberg, ~1440) made Luther possible. Without mass distribution, he'd be another local heretic silenced by Rome. Parallel to how the internet enabled decentralized movements centuries later.

Christianity — Key Tension Points

TopicReligious PositionHistorical / Critical View
Jesus's existenceCentral, divinely attestedBroadly accepted, but no contemporary documents
Virgin birthLiteral miracle; fulfilled prophecyOnly in Matthew & Luke. Isaiah uses almah (young woman), not betulah (virgin)
ResurrectionPhysical, historical eventSomething convinced followers; the "what" is outside historical analysis
The GospelsDivinely inspiredWritten 40–70 years later by non-eyewitnesses with theological agendas
Paul's roleApostle chosen by ChristArguably the true founder of Christianity as a distinct religion
The TrinityRevealed truth, present from the beginningDeveloped over 300+ years; the word doesn't appear in the Bible
The canonDivinely guided selectionCenturies-long political and theological process
The ReformationRecovery of truth (Prot.) / Tragic schism (Cath.)Enabled by printing press and political interests as much as theology

Christianity — Timeline Summary

~6–4 BCE
Jesus born (traditional)
~30 CE
Crucifixion
~35
Paul's conversion
~49
Council of Jerusalem — Gentiles exempt from Torah
~50–60
Paul's letters (earliest Christian documents)
70
Romans destroy Temple / Gospel of Mark
~93
Josephus mentions Jesus
313
Edict of Milan — Christianity legalized
325
Council of Nicaea — Trinity formalized
367
27-book New Testament canon listed
380
Christianity = official Roman state religion
451
Council of Chalcedon — Oriental Orthodox split
1054
East-West Schism — Catholic/Orthodox split
1204
Fourth Crusade sacks Constantinople
1517
Luther's 95 Theses — Reformation begins
1618–1648
Thirty Years' War (~8 million dead)
PART IV

Judaism — Deep Timeline

The Patriarchs & Exodus ~2000–1200 BCE

Religious Narrative
~2000 BCE
Abraham. God calls Abram from Ur to Canaan. Promises: land, descendants, blessing. Circumcision = the covenant. Sarah conceives Isaac; Ishmael and Hagar sent away. (Islam traces Arabs through Ishmael; Judaism through Isaac.)
~1900
Binding of Isaac (Akedah). God commands the sacrifice. Abraham obeys. God stops him — provides a ram. The foundational test of faith. (In Islam: Ishmael, not Isaac.)
~1800
Jacob wrestles an angel, renamed "Israel." 12 sons = 12 tribes.
~1700
Joseph sold into slavery. Rises to Egyptian vizier. Family relocates to Egypt.
~1250
The Exodus. 10 plagues. Passover. Moses parts the Red Sea. Torah given at Sinai — 613 commandments. 40 years wandering. Moses dies before entering Canaan.
Historical Record
Patriarchs
No archeological evidence for Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, or Joseph. Stories fit origin mythology conventions. Names have Mesopotamian parallels, proving context, not historicity.
Egypt
No Egyptian record mentions Israelite slavery or exodus. Egypt kept extensive records; the absence is significant.
Exodus
~2 million people wandering Sinai for 40 years would leave evidence. None found. Most scholars: not historical at described scale. A smaller kernel of truth is debated.
Sinai
No archeological identification of the biblical mountain. Multiple candidates; none confirmed.
~1208 BCE
Merneptah Stele — a people called "Israel" existed in Canaan by this date. How they got there is debated.

The Kingdoms & First Temple ~1200–586 BCE

Religious Narrative
~1020
Saul — first king. Fails. Disobeys God.
~1000
David. Unifies tribes. Conquers Jerusalem. God promises eternal dynasty. Also: adultery with Bathsheba, murder of Uriah.
~960
Solomon builds the First Temple. God's presence (Shekinah) dwells there. Solomon: 700 wives, 300 concubines.
~930
Kingdom splits: Israel (north, 10 tribes) and Judah (south, 2 tribes).
722
Assyria conquers Israel. 10 tribes deported — the "Lost Tribes." Never return.
586
Babylon destroys the First Temple. The Exile. Judaism transforms from Temple religion to text-based, portable religion. Arguably the most important adaptation in Jewish history.
Historical Record
David
Tel Dan inscription (~840 BCE) mentions "House of David" — confirming the dynasty. But no evidence of a grand kingdom matching the biblical scale. Jerusalem was likely a modest hill town.
Solomon
No archeological evidence of the grand kingdom described. Minimalists: local chieftains aggrandized. Maximalists: keep digging.
722
Assyrian records confirm destruction of northern kingdom.
586
Babylonian records confirm conquest and deportation. "By the rivers of Babylon, we sat and wept" (Psalm 137) reflects real trauma.
Temple
No remains found. Temple Mount is politically impossible to excavate (Dome of the Rock sits on it). Existence assumed based on textual evidence.

Second Temple & Rabbinic Judaism ~538 BCE–500 CE

Religious Narrative
538 BCE
Cyrus the Great allows Jews to return. Called "God's anointed" (mashiach) in Isaiah 45:1 — a pagan king given the messianic title.
515
Second Temple built. No Ark of the Covenant (lost forever).
167–160
Maccabean Revolt. Antiochus IV desecrates Temple. Judah Maccabee wins. Temple rededicated — origin of Hanukkah.
70 CE
Romans destroy Second Temple. Judaism loses its central institution permanently.
132–135
Bar Kokhba Revolt. Rabbi Akiva declares Bar Kokhba the Messiah. Fails. Hadrian renames Jerusalem, bans Jews, renames province "Syria Palaestina."
~200
Mishnah compiled. First written Oral Torah. Foundation of Rabbinic Judaism.
~400–500
Talmud compiled. 2.5 million words, 63 tractates. Judaism as practiced today is Talmudic Judaism.
Historical Record
Cyrus
Cyrus Cylinder (British Museum) confirms his decree. Among the most celebrated archeological confirmations of a biblical event.
Temple
Herod's expansion archeologically documented. The Western Wall is a retaining wall of Herod's platform, not the Temple itself.
70 CE
One of the best-documented events in antiquity. Josephus's eyewitness account. Arch of Titus depicts soldiers carrying the menorah.
Bar Kokhba
Confirmed by coins, letters, and cave finds. His actual letters discovered in the 1960s.
Transformation
The Temple destruction is to Judaism what Karbala is to Shia Islam: the defining trauma. The rabbis reinvented Judaism as a portable religion of study and prayer.

Diaspora, Persecution & Survival ~135–1948 CE

Nearly two millennia. The narrative and historical record largely merge here — these events are among the most thoroughly documented of any people.

  • ~500–1000 CE — Jewish communities thrive under Islamic rule. Geonim lead Babylonian academies. Often more tolerant than Christian Europe.
  • ~1000–1200 — Golden Age in Muslim Spain. Maimonides (1138–1204): philosopher, physician, legal codifier. Most influential Jewish thinker since the Talmud.
  • 1096 — First Crusade massacres: Crusaders slaughter Jewish communities in the Rhineland en route to the Holy Land.
  • 1290 — Jews expelled from England.
  • 1306 — Jews expelled from France.
  • 1348–1351 — Black Death. Jews blamed for the plague across Europe. Mass murders.
  • 1478 — Spanish Inquisition.
  • 1492 — Jews expelled from Spain. Sephardic diaspora scatters across North Africa, Ottoman Empire, Netherlands.
  • 1500s–1700s — Shtetl culture in Eastern Europe.
  • ~1740s — Rise of Hasidism (Baal Shem Tov). Mystical, ecstatic, populist. Opposed by Mitnagdim (led by the Vilna Gaon).
  • 1700s–1800sHaskalah (Jewish Enlightenment). Moses Mendelssohn. Leads to Reform Judaism. Fierce Orthodox pushback.
  • 1881–1920s — Massive pogroms in Russia. Millions emigrate to America.
  • 1896–1897 — Herzl's Der Judenstaat. First Zionist Congress. The argument: only a Jewish state solves European antisemitism.
  • 1933–1945The Holocaust (Shoah). Six million Jews murdered — one-third of the world's Jewish population. The theological question: "Where was God?" Some lost faith. Others argued survival itself became a religious obligation.
  • 1948State of Israel declared. Immediately invaded by five Arab armies. Israel survives. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict begins — the unresolved consequence of 2,000 years of diaspora meeting an existing Arab population.

Judaism — Key Tension Points

TopicReligious PositionHistorical / Critical View
The PatriarchsHistorical founders of the covenantNo archeological evidence for any of them as individuals
The ExodusHistorical, foundational eventNo Egyptian or archeological evidence at the described scale
Sinai revelationGod literally spoke the Torah to MosesTorah shows multiple authorship over centuries (Documentary Hypothesis: J, E, D, P)
David's kingdomGrand unified monarchyTel Dan confirms dynasty; archeology suggests a more modest kingdom
First TempleSolomon built it as describedNo physical remains found; Temple Mount cannot be excavated
Torah authorshipMoses wrote the TorahMultiple authors over centuries; contains anachronisms and contradictions
Chosen PeopleDivine election for responsibilityCommon ancient Near Eastern self-understanding; Israel's version proved uniquely durable
The HolocaustTheological crisis — divine punishment to divine mysteryExhaustively documented; theological responses are theology, not history

Judaism — Timeline Summary

~2000 BCE
Abraham (traditional; no evidence)
~1250 BCE
Exodus and Sinai (traditional; no evidence)
~1208 BCE
Merneptah Stele — first mention of "Israel"
~1000 BCE
David captures Jerusalem
~960 BCE
Solomon builds the First Temple
722 BCE
Assyria destroys northern kingdom — "Lost Tribes"
586 BCE
Babylon destroys First Temple — Exile begins
538 BCE
Cyrus allows return (confirmed by Cyrus Cylinder)
167 BCE
Maccabean Revolt / Hanukkah
70 CE
Romans destroy Second Temple — Judaism transforms
132–135
Bar Kokhba Revolt — Jews banned from Jerusalem
~200
Mishnah compiled
~500
Babylonian Talmud compiled
~1200
Maimonides — most influential post-Talmudic thinker
1492
Jews expelled from Spain
1933–1945
The Holocaust — 6 million murdered
1948
State of Israel declared