Explore Biblical History
Through Time
Journey through 6,000+ years of Biblical history. Discover key events, people, prophecies fulfilled, covenants made, kings who ruled, and miracles performed — all with scripture references and historical context.
⏳ Explore the Biblical Story
📖 Quick Bible Timeline Links — Shareable & Google-Indexed
The Major Eras of Biblical History
🌍 Creation & the Patriarchs (~4000–1700 BC)
Genesis covers Creation, the Fall, Cain & Abel, Noah's Flood, the Tower of Babel, and God's covenant with Abraham (c. 2000 BC) — promising land, descendants, and blessing to all nations. The Patriarchal narratives follow Abraham, Isaac, Jacob (Israel), and Joseph's journey to Egypt.
🏜️ The Exodus & Wilderness (~1446–1406 BC)
Moses leads Israel out of Egyptian slavery in one of history's most dramatic events. The Ten Plagues, the Passover, crossing the Red Sea, receiving the Ten Commandments at Sinai, 40 years of wilderness wandering, and God's provision of manna define this foundational era of Israel's identity.
👑 The Kingdom Period (~1050–586 BC)
Israel transitions from judges to kings. Saul becomes the first king, followed by David (who establishes Jerusalem as capital, ~1000 BC) and Solomon (who builds the Temple). The kingdom then splits into northern Israel and southern Judah, leading to centuries of conflict, prophetic ministry, and eventual conquest by Assyria (722 BC) and Babylon (586 BC).
⚖️ Judges & Early Israel (~1380–1050 BC)
After Joshua's death, Israel cycled repeatedly through disobedience, oppression, repentance, and deliverance under charismatic leaders called Judges — including Deborah, Gideon, Samson, and Samuel. This turbulent period ends with Israel demanding a king, setting the stage for the monarchy.
⛓️ Exile & Return (~586–400 BC)
Babylon destroyed Jerusalem and the Temple in 586 BC, deporting Israel's leadership. The prophets Daniel, Ezekiel, and Jeremiah ministered during this period. In 538 BC, Cyrus of Persia decreed the Jews could return. Ezra restored the Law; Nehemiah rebuilt Jerusalem's walls. Malachi closes the Old Testament ~430 BC.
⏳ The 400 Silent Years (~430–4 BC)
Between Malachi and Matthew, no new Scripture was written for about 400 years. Israel passed under Greek rule (Alexander the Great, 332 BC), faced religious persecution under Antiochus IV Epiphanes, rose up in the Maccabean revolt (167 BC), and came under Roman control (Pompey, 63 BC) — setting the world stage for the Messiah's arrival.
🔥 Early Church & Paul (~30–95 AD)
Pentecost (Acts 2) launched the Church as the Holy Spirit descended on 120 disciples in Jerusalem. Peter, Stephen, Philip, and Paul spread the gospel across the Roman Empire. Paul's three missionary journeys planted churches in Asia Minor, Greece, and Rome. John wrote Revelation from Patmos ~95 AD, completing the New Testament canon.