List the name of each of the 66 books of the Bible in your chosen diagram format.
Briefly list the theme of each of the 66 books of the Bible in your chosen diagram format.
Connect each book with all the other book/s that have a similar/same theme or message.
Sample Solution
OLD TESTAMENT
The Pentateuch
• Genesis: God of Promise – Beginnings
Describes the creation; gives the history of the old world, and of the steps taken by God toward the formation of theocracy.
• Exodus: God of Power – Deliverance
The history of Israel’s departure from Egypt; the giving of the law; the tabernacle.
• Leviticus: God of Purity – Instruction
The ceremonial law.
• Numbers: God of Perseverance – Journeys
The census of the people; the story of the wanderings in the wilderness.
• Deuteronomy: God of Preparation – Obedience
The law rehearsed; the death of Moses
• .History Joshua: God of the Land – Conquest
The story of the conquest and partition of Canaan.
untry by themselves as the Kolkos claim they were a “capitalist nation unable to expand its internal market”. The Kolkos have little sympathy for the US and argue that because of the “vast unsalable surplus” that had built up, the aim of American prosperity was dependant to the rebuilding of European cities, with no interest of the people or resolving their issues. They suggest that the rebuilding was crucial and a principal motive behind the Marshall plan as it was this that would allow prosperity in the countries to return to normal levels and hence have the money to pay for the US goods, and fuel their aim of an American empire.
In the Kolko’s book, they are clearly anti-US, which is seen in their criticisms of the plan and its aim. This could be because around the time they were writing in 1972, American foreign policy was heavily under scrutiny from America, this is evident as during this time troops were being withdrawn from Vietnam due to the persistent backlash from the American public Kolko addressed the issues of the foreign policy as inapplicable and was notoriously anti-capitalist. Historians have said it was “no surprise: Kolko had been a socialist” which explain his views of the Americans selfish self-interest.
Rees writing in the “Age of containment” has a contrasting argument to the Kolkos as he has a central focus on the containment of communism as being a key motive. Rees argues that the motives behind the Marshall plan “stems from the events of 7 November 1917, with the successful storming of the Petrograd Winter Palace” and the deep rooted ideological differences that he noted as “grave differences” at Potsdam. From this we c