You've Heard It Said
You already know the Samaritans. Or you think you do. The Good Samaritan, the woman at the well, a word that's come to mean someone who helps a stranger. But we mostly learned the ending without the beginning. Who were these people? And why did a first-century Jew hear "Samaritan" and feel something tighten? This is the backstory. It starts about seven centuries before Jesus, when the kingdom split in two after Solomon died, and it runs through the Assyrian conquest of 722 BC, when an empire's brutal habit of deporting some populations and importing others created a whole new people in the northern hill country. The episode digs into where the familiar "mixed race, mixed-up religion" story actually comes from, what the Samaritans claimed about themselves, and what archaeologists found on Mount Gerizim that doesn't fit the traditional account. From there it traces the long, sad falling-out between two branches of the same family: a rejected offer to help rebuild the temple, the reforms of Ezra and Nehemiah, and a rival temple on Gerizim built, in part, on how you read a single verb in Deuteronomy. By the time Jesus sits down at a well in Samaria, that wound is still fresh. And he goes looking for these people on purpose. You've Heard It Said: where faith meets history, and the stories we thought we knew come alive. 👉 https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify [https://youvehearditsaid.short.gy/spotify]
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