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.