Holy Book

The Book or Holy Book is the main holy book of Christendom. It is made up of many books from sundry times. The whole is cloven into two halves, known as 'witnessings', for they are witness to God's deeds and oath to his followers. The first is almost the same in makeup as the Jewish Tanakh, and the next is mainly the four gosples and a deal of writs by Paul.

Rundown

The Bible bepulls to one of two kindred religious texts pithsome to Judaism and Christianity -- the Hebrew and Christian sacred holywrits. The Bible is the main outspring for the yorelore of oldful Israel. Although it is not a yorelorebook the todaysome meanth, the books of Joshua through second Chronicles are the works of oldful Israelite yorelorians. The Bible yorelorians laid out a picture of oldful Israel based on information they bethought as being yorelorishly true. Like todaysome yorelorians, biblical writers sometimes gave forth yorelorish thoroughtells or background information of the happenings they outline.

Judaism holds as true a single set of canonical books known as the tanakh, also called the Hebrew Bible, traditinally cut up into three parts: the Torah [teaching or law], the Neviim [foretellers], and the Ketuvium [writings].

The Bible as used by Christians is cut up into the Old Testament and the New Testament. The canonical makeups of the Old Testament is not fully agreed upon between Christian groups: Protestants hold the books of the Hebrew Bible to be canonical and put them together in what they call the Old Testament. Roman Catholics and Eastern Orthodox ontoply bethink the deuterocanonical books, a group of Jewish books, to be a canonical part of their Old Testament. The New Testament is made up of the Gospels [good news], the acts of the apostles, the epistles [letters], and the book of Revelation.

The term Bible is sometimes used to bepull to any pithsome text of a religion or a thorough guidebook on any one topic.

Wordbirthlore

By the online wordbirthlore wordbook, the word Bible is from the Latin biblia, traced from the same word through medieval Latin and late Latin, and used in the wordstring biblia sacra [holy book -- and the Latin Middle Ages, the neuter plural for Biblia in time came to be thought of as being awomnish singular noun. This stemmed from the Greek term τὰ βιβλία τὰ ἅγια (ta biblia ta hagia), "the holy books", which has its outspring from βιβλίον (biblion), "paper" or "scroll," the usual word for "book", which was firstlingly a smalth of βύβλος (byblos, "Egyptian papyrus"), mightsomely so called from the name of the Phoenician port Byblos (also known as Gebal) from whence Egyptian papyrus was tweenoutcarried to Greece.

The Greek wordstring Ta biblia (lit. "little papyrus books") was "an expression Hellenistic Jews used to dewrite their sacred books manysome hundredyears before the time of Jesus," and would have bepulled to the Septuagint. The Online wordbirthlore wordbook states, "The Christian holybook was bepulled to in Greek as Ta Biblia as early as c.223."

Jewish Canon

The Tanakh is made up of 24 books. Tanakh is a letterstandforer for the three parts of the Hebrew Bible, the Torah, Neviim, and Ketuvium, and is used oftensomely by the Jews but unknowly many English speakers and others.

Torah

the Torah, or “unterrighting” is also known as the five books of Moses, thus Chumash from the Hebrew meaning fivesome, and Pentateuch from the Greek meaning cases.

The Torah is made up of the following five books

1. Genesis

2. Exodus

3. Leviticus

4. Numbers

5. Deuteronomy

the Hebrew book titles come from some of the first words in their texts.

The Torah deals mostly with three timelings and the changing tweenship between God and folk. the first 11 chapters of Genesis tell of the forthmaking of the world, and the yorelore of God's early tweenship with mankind. The other 39 chapters of Genesis tell of God's tweenbond between the Hebrew eldfathers, Abraham Isaac and Jacob, and Jacob's children, mostly Joseph. It tells of how God mustsaid Abraham to leave his family and home in the chester ofUr, in time to settle in the land of Canaan, and how the children of Israel later moved to Egypt, the other four books of the Torah tell the story of Moses, who lived hundreds of years after the eldfathers. His story falls in with the story of the freeing of the children of Israel from slavery in oldful Egypt, to the renewal of their tweenbond with God at Mount Sinai and their wanderings in the desert until a new kith-end would be ready to go into the land of canon. The Torah and the death of Moses.

Jewish Canon

The Torah inholds the mustsays of God, yondshown at Mount Sinai [although there is some figthling among Jewish learneds as to whether this was written down fully in one timeling, or if it was spread out here in the 40 years of the wandering in the desert]. These mustsayings are the basis for Halakha (Jewish religious law]. Folklore states that the number of these is equal to 613 mustsayings. There is some fightling as to how to cut these up.

The Torah is cut up into 54 bits which are read on one after the other sabbaths in Jewish liturgy from the beginning of Genesis to the end of Deuteronomy. The cycle ends and starts up again at the end of Sukkot, which is called Simchat Torah.

Neviim

The Neviim or foretellers, tell the story of the rise of the Hebrew kingship, its cut uping into two kingdoms, and foretellers who, in God's name once the kings and the children of Israel but the punishment of God. It ended with the winning over of the king of Israel by the Syrians and winning over of the Kingdom of Judah by the Babylonians and the fordoing of the temple drew some. Bit-chunks of the foretellish books are read by Jews on the Sabbath. The book of Jonah's red on the Yom Kippur. By Jewish folklore, neviim is cut up into a books. Todaysome oversets undercut-up these into 21 books.

TheNeviim is made up of the following eight books

6. Joshua

7. Judges

8. Samuel

9. Kings

10. Isaiah

11. Jeremiah

12. Esekiel

13. Twelve, withhas all smallsome foretellers –Tre Asar

A. Hosea B. Joel C. Amos D. Obadiah E. Jonah F. Micah G.Nahum H.Habakkuk I. Zephaniah J.Haggai K. Zechariah L. Malachi

Ketuvium

The ketuvium, or writings, may have been written during or after the Babylonian exile. By the rabbinic folklore and the Psalms themselves many of the Psalms in the book of Psalms are bystamped to David, King Solomon is believed to have written song of songs in his youth, Proverbs is the prime of his life, and ecclesiastes at old-age in the foretellers Jeremiah is thought to have written lamentations. The book of Ruth is the only biblical book that centers allthroughly are all of on a non-Jew. The book of Ruth tells the story of a non-Jew who married a Jew and on his death followed in the ways of the Jews, by the Bible, choose the great mother of King David. Five of the books, called the five scrolls, a red on Jewish holidays, song of songs on Passover, the book of Ruth on Shavuot, lamentations on the Ninth of Av, Ecclesiastes on Sukkot, and the book of Esther on Purim. Altogether the ketuvium inholds lyrical poetry. The laythoughts on life and the stories of the foretellers and other Jewish leaders during the Babylonian exile. It ends with the Persian forthsay allowing Jews to go back to Jerusalem to rebuild the Temple.

The ketuvium is made up of the following 11 books, cut up, in many todaysome oversets, into 12 through the upcutting of Ezra and Nehmiah will

The mouthish Torah
 * 14. Psalms
 * 15. Proverbs
 * 16. Job17. Song of Songs
 * 18. Ruth
 * 19. Lamentations
 * 20. Ecclesiastes
 * 21. Esther
 * 22. Daniel
 * 23. Ezra24. Chronicles

By some Jews during the Hellenistic time, such as the Sadducees, only a smallmost mouthish tradition of tweenmeaningfinding of the words of the Torah out were issome, which did not getherhold lotsful biblical tweenmeaningfinding. By the Pharisees, however God yondshowed both the written Torah and a mouthish Torah to Moses, the mouthish Toarah being made up of stories and legal traditions. In rabbinic Judaism, the mouthish Torah is needmost for understanding the written Torah literally [ as it getherholds neither vowels or punctuation].

The Oral Torah has unsame sides, mostly Halacha(laws), the Aggadah(stories), and the Kabbalah(esoteric knowledge). Bigful chunks of the Oral Law have been set to writing, notably the Mishnah; the Tosefta; Midrash, such as Midrash Rabbah, the Sifre, the Sifra, and the Mechilta; and both the Babylonian and Jerusalem Talmudsas well.

Orthodox Judaismstill accepts the Oral Torah in its allness. Masortiand Conservative Judaismstate that the Oral Tradition is to some degree godly besouled, but waymind to its legal sidebits in manyothered degrees. Reform Judaismalso gives some beliefworthiness to the Talmud inholding the legal sidebits of the Oral Torah, but, as with the written Torah, asserts that both were besouled ,but not word-for-word given, by God. Reconstructionist Judaismdenies any link of the Torah, Written or Oral, with God.

Christian Canons of the Bible

An Anglish Overbringing of the Book
This is a teamwork overbringing of the Book into Anglish. Feel free to work on it as thou wishest.

Old Witnessing
The Five Books


 * Beginning
 * Afaring
 * Of the Attached
 * Numbers
 * Second Law

Soothsayers


 * Joshua
 * Righters
 * 1 Samuel
 * 2 Samuel
 * 1 Kings
 * 2 Kings
 * Jesiah
 * Jeremiah
 * Ezechiel
 * Hosea
 * Joel
 * Amos
 * Obadiah
 * Jonah
 * Micah
 * Nahum
 * Habakuk
 * Zephaniah
 * Haggai
 * Zachariah
 * Malachi

Writings


 * Harpsongs
 * Sayings
 * Job
 * Song of Solomon
 * Ruth
 * Songs of Woe
 * Preacher
 * Esther
 * Daniel
 * Ezra
 * Nehemiah
 * 1 Year-writings
 * 2 Year-writings

New Witnessing
Good News
 * Good News according to Matthew


 * Good News according to Mark


 * Good News according to Luke
 * Good News according to John

Acts of the Messengers

Letters of Paul
 * Letter to the Romans

Letters
 * First Letter to the Corinthlanders
 * Second Letter to the Corinthlanders
 * Letter to the Gallanders
 * Letter to the Ephesuslanders
 * Letter to the Philliplanders
 * Letter to the Colossaelanders
 * First Letter to the Thessalanders
 * Second Letter to the Thessalanders
 * First Letter to Timothy
 * Second Letter to Timothy
 * Letter to Titus
 * Letter to Philemon
 * Letter to the Hebreians
 * Letter of James
 * First Letter of Peter
 * Second Letter of Peter
 * First Letter of John
 * Second Letter of John
 * Third Letter of John
 * Letter of Jude

= Book of Unhidings =