A New Live Course

Visions of the End

How early Jews and Christians imagined the end of the age.

Visions of the End — course art
Live · Starts Aug 13 28 Lectures Jason Staples · Early Judaism

What “The End” Really Meant

They knew the end was coming.
Just not the end you’d expect.

Daniel’s Vision of the Four Beasts — Gustave Doré
Daniel’s Vision of the Four Beasts Gustave Doré · 1866

Say “apocalypse” today and people picture the planet in flames. But that is not what early Jews meant. They expected something closer to a cosmic renewal: the end of one age of wickedness and the beginning of a renewed creation, guided by the justice of God.

This was not a fringe idea or a single doomsday script. Across the Hebrew Bible, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and a whole library of early Jewish literature, the end was imagined in strikingly different ways. Diverse messiahs, the return of the lost tribes, the resurrection of the dead, and the fate of the nations all hung in the balance.

Yet beneath the diversity ran a single story: from Eden, through Abraham’s covenant, toward a promised resolution. It was out of these specific expectations that the Jesus movement, and eventually Christianity, was born. This course traces how the end was envisioned, and why those visions still shape how the West imagines the future.

Course at a Glance

Visions of the End.

/ 01

Format

Live online + recordings

/ 02

Lectures

28 · 50 min each

/ 03

Live Q&A

After every class

/ 04

Schedule

Tue & Thu · 5 PM ET

/ 05

Instructor

Jason Staples

Twenty-eight lectures,
grouped into six
major themes.

How the Course Unfolds

From the garden to the kingdom of God, these are the six themes the course moves through as it traces how early Jews and Christians imagined the age to come.

Theme I

A Story With an Ending

Long before anyone spoke of “the end times,” the Hebrew Bible was already telling one continuous story, from the garden of Eden through Abraham’s covenant. Despite endless disagreement over the details, the ancients read it as a single arc bending toward a promised conclusion: the seed from which all later end-time hope would grow.

Genesis & the Torah
Theme II

Exile and Restoration

By the Second Temple period, many of the traditional tribes of “Israel” had not returned as the prophets promised, and the hope that they would someday, somehow return shaped how the future itself was imagined. Restoration, it turned out, meant far more than the freedom of the Jews.

8th – 6th century BCE
Theme III

The Birth of Apocalypticism

Daniel’s visions, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the visionary literature of early Judaism. The two-ages framework, the war of light and darkness, and the conviction that history was moving toward a divinely guided turning point: not annihilation, but renewal.

c. 200 BCE – 1st century CE
Theme IV

Many Messiahs

There was never one messianic blueprint. Against the assumption of a single warrior-king come to crush Israel’s enemies, the course works through a strikingly diverse range of anointed figures (kings, priests, prophets, and heavenly deliverers) across the early Jewish texts.

Second Temple Judaism
Theme V

Resurrection & Divine Justice

Resurrection was not a comforting promise that good people go to heaven. It was born from a fierce belief in the justice of God: those denied their reward in this life must be raised to receive it. We trace how corporate, national, and even cosmic the hope of the afterlife could be.

Daniel to the Scrolls
Theme VI

The End That Birthed Christianity

How the early Jesus movement grew directly out of these apocalyptic expectations, with real “aha” moments in the Dead Sea Scrolls and other key texts. Seen this way, the New Testament isn’t new at all, but a coherent species of early Judaism.

1st century CE
JS
Jason Staples Jason Staples · 2026
Your Instructor

Jason Staples.

Assistant Teaching Professor, Philosophy & Religious Studies · North Carolina State University

Jason A. Staples (PhD, UNC-Chapel Hill) is a scholar of Early Judaism and Early Christianity and Assistant Teaching Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at NC State University.

He is best known for his paradigm-shifting monographs from Cambridge University Press: Paul and the Resurrection of Israel (2024) and The Idea of Israel in Second Temple Judaism (2021).

Ph.D. UNC–Chapel HillNC State UniversityCambridge University Press (×2)Early Judaism & Christian OriginsSecond Temple specialist

0

50-Minute Live Lectures

Q&A

15 min every class

Lifetime Replay

Why this course
is unlike any other.

What This Course Offers

Jason Staples brings the visionaries, messiahs, and apocalyptic texts of early Judaism into a single sweeping story, taught live, with the chance to ask your questions in real time.

/ 01

Read the ancient sources directly.

The Hebrew Bible, Daniel and 1 Enoch, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the New Testament, the actual texts in which early Jews and Christians imagined the end, read closely and in context.

/ 02

Taught by a leading specialist.

Jason Staples has spent his career inside Second Temple Judaism and Christian origins. You get a specialist’s command of the period, not a survey skimmed from secondary sources.

Into the world of Qumran.

The caves, the scrolls, and the community that copied them.

/ 03

Live, with real Q&A.

Twenty-eight live sessions, with fifteen minutes of question time after every lecture. Ask Dr. Staples directly, and watch the argument unfold in real time.

The age to come.

Resurrection, cosmic renewal, and the kingdom of God, the hopes that shaped both early Judaism and Christianity.

/ 04

University depth, made accessible.

No prior background in the Bible or ancient history required. Whether you’re a believer, a skeptic, or simply curious, the story is built from the ground up, and every class is recorded for you to keep.

You Thought You Knew What the Bible Said About End Times

Common assumptions
this course will challenge.

Common Assumption

“Apocalypse” means the end and destruction of the physical world.

In fact

Picture the planet in flames and you’ve already misread the word. What the ancient visionaries actually expected was something else entirely, and it changes how you hear the whole New Testament.

Common Assumption

Jews were all awaiting one militaristic warrior-king to smash their enemies.

In fact

Reach for the lone warrior-king and you’ve met only one figure in a far more crowded field. Who else they were waiting for is where this gets surprising.

Common Assumption

End-times hope was about individual salvation and the afterlife.

In fact

We assume they were worried about their own souls. The texts are reaching for something much larger than the individual, and naming it reframes the entire hope.

Common Assumption

The restoration of Israel simply meant freedom for the Jews.

In fact

Restoration sounds simple, until you remember what Israel had actually lost. Once you do, who “the end” was really for stops being obvious.

Common Assumption

Every gentile nation would simply be destroyed in the end.

In fact

It seems like a foregone conclusion. The sources are stranger and far less unanimous than that, and what some of them expect for the nations may catch you off guard.

Common Assumption

The New Testament is a brand-new kind of literature.

In fact

It reads as something brand new. Put it back among its Jewish contemporaries, though, and it begins to look like something you’ll recognize, with consequences for how you read every page.

Everything Included with Your Registration

Exclusive Bonuses.

Visions of the End course journal
Limited-Time Bonus

A Free Visions of the End Journal

Enroll before the early-bird deadline and we’ll ship you a free, custom Visions of the End journal to take notes through all twenty-eight lectures.

Ends August 1

/ 01

Live Q&A After Every Class

Fifteen minutes of live Q&A after every lecture, recorded so you can revisit the questions and Dr. Staples’s answers anytime.

/ 02

Lecture Recordings for Life

Every one of the twenty-eight sessions is recorded with lifetime access, so you can attend live or catch up and rewatch whenever you like.

/ 03

Lecture Slides

Download Dr. Staples’s full slide decks, ideal for review, note-taking, or sharing with a study group.

/ 04

Full Transcripts & Captions

Searchable transcripts and closed captions for every lecture, perfect for quoting, deeper study, or following along if English is not your first language.

/ 05

Audio Downloads

MP3 downloads of every lecture. Listen on your commute, during a walk, or whenever you’re away from a screen.

/ 06

4 Quizzes

Four quizzes to test your understanding and reinforce the key ideas as you progress through the course.

/ 07

Bonus Lecture: Intro to Apocalypticism

A bonus introductory lecture on apocalypticism from John J. Collins, one of the world’s leading scholars of Jewish apocalyptic literature, included from his own course.

/ 08

Questions for Reflection & Recommended Readings

Curated discussion questions and a reading list for each lecture, for going deeper on your own or with a study group.

/ 09

Certificate of Completion

A full semester-length course. Finish it and you’ll receive a digital certificate of completion to commemorate your study and accomplishment.

$1 from every registration is donated to charity: water, bringing clean water to people in need.

2 ways to purchase this course

Stand-Alone Purchase

Enjoy the course at a fraction of the cost

$1,499 Value 28 university-level lectures by a Cambridge University Press author. Comparable university seminars run $2,000–$4,000.

Regular Price $395 Early-Bird $295 Ends August 1


Included in Your Purchase: Lifetime Access to This University-Level Course With:

  • 28 live fifty-minute lectures by Jason Staples
  • 15 minutes of live Q&A after every class
  • A bonus lecture, 4 quizzes & lecture slides
  • Audio downloads, full transcripts & captions
  • Questions for reflection & recommended readings
  • Lifetime access to all recordings
  • Certificate of completion
Enroll Now Single Course

Access this Course PLUS Every Course in Our Vault

(250+ Hours of Biblical Learning!)

  • 50+ existing courses plus all new releases (we're aiming for 20+ new courses in 2026)
  • All "Face to Face on the Bible" events and debates
  • Bart Ehrman's monthly "Spotlight" lectures
  • Join 1,500+ members for discussion, member mixers, trivia, book club, & more!
Start FREE Trial

then special rate $49.95/month

Frequently Asked

Everything you
need to know.

How many lectures are included, and how long are they?

Jason Staples presents twenty-eight fifty-minute lectures, each followed by fifteen minutes of live Q&A. The course runs from August 13 through November 19, 2026.

Is this a live course?

Yes. Classes meet live on Zoom, Tuesdays and Thursdays at 5:00 PM ET (a handful of sessions in late September and early October begin at 3:30 PM ET), so you can take part in the discussion and ask Dr. Staples your questions in real time. Every session is also recorded.

What if I can’t attend a class live?

No problem. Every lecture and Q&A is recorded and posted to our online platform, and you keep lifetime access. You can attend the sessions that work for you and catch up on the rest whenever you like.

How will I access the course?

After you enroll, you will receive the Zoom links for the live sessions by email, along with login instructions for our online course platform, ThriveCart Learn, where all recordings are posted. If you are a member of Biblical Studies Academy (BSA), your access will also be available inside the community.

Do I have lifetime access?

Yes. The recordings of all twenty-eight lectures (and the Q&A sessions) are yours with lifetime access. You can watch them on any device, on your own schedule, and return to them as often as you like.

Do I need prior knowledge of the Bible or ancient Judaism?

No prior knowledge required. Dr. Staples introduces the texts, the history, and the key ideas as the course unfolds. Whether you’re coming in fresh or already have a background in biblical studies, you’ll find the course genuinely rewarding.

Is there a discount for BSA members?

Yes. Members of Biblical Studies Academy (BSA) receive 30% off the course price.

Will subtitles or captions be available?

Yes. The recordings include closed captions, and full transcripts are included with the course, so you can follow along in text or search for specific passages.

What payment types are accepted?

We accept PayPal and all major credit cards.

Do you offer a money-back guarantee?

Absolutely. If you don’t love the course, send us an email at support@bartehrman.com within 30 days and we will refund 100% of your investment.