writing a
Sefer Torah. The Hebrew Bible is commonly known in Judaism as the "Tanakh", it being a vocalization of the
acronym TNK (תַּנַ"ךְ):
Torah ("Teachings"), ''
Nevi'im ("Prophets") and Ketuvim'' ("Writings"). In Christianity it's known as the "Old Testament". The Bible is not a single, monolithic piece of literature because each of these three sections, in turn, contains books written at different times by different authors. All books of the Bible are not strictly religious in nature; for example,
The Song of Songs is a love poem and, along with
The Book of Esther, does not explicitly mention
God. "Torah" in this instance refers to the
Pentateuch (to parallel
Chumash, חומש), so called because it consists of five books:
Genesis,
Exodus,
Numbers,
Leviticus and
Deuteronomy. It is the core scripture of
Judaism and
Samaritanism, honored in these religions as the most sacred of scripture. It is sometimes called the "
Five Books of Moses" because according to the Jewish tradition, the Torah, as a
divinely inspired text, was given to
Moses by God himself on
Mount Sinai during the
Exodus of the Israelites from Egypt, which is portrayed as the founding event in the formation of the Israelite religion. Other than discussing the Exodus itself and the journey to the
Promised Land, the
Pentateuch has such themes as the origin of the world, of humanity and of the ancient Israelites, the ancestors of modern-day Jews. The Nevi'im section of the Hebrew Bible consists of two sub-divisions: the Former Prophets ( , the narrative books of Joshua, Judges, Samuel and Kings) and the Latter Prophets ( , the books of Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel and the
Twelve Minor Prophets). The first sub-division speaks much about the history of the Israelites following the death of Moses, arrival to the
Promised Land and the history of the kingdom up until the
Siege of Jerusalem by the Neo-Babylon Empire in 586 BCE. The Ketuvim sector of the Hebrew Bible is a collection of philosophical and artistic literature believed to have been written under the influence of
Ruach ha-Kodesh (the Holy Spirit). It consists of 11 books:
Daniel,
Ezra-
Nehemiah,
Chronicles, five books known as the
Chamesh Megilot and three poetic books, including the
Book of Psalms, quotations of which comprise a large portion of canonical daily prayers in Judaism.
Dating and authorship The oldest manuscripts discovered yet, including those of the
Dead Sea Scrolls, date to about the 2nd century BCE. While
Jewish tradition holds that the Pentateuch was written between the 16th century and the 12th century BCE, secular scholars are virtually unanimous in rejecting these early datings, and agree that there was a final redaction some time between 900–450 BCE. The traditional view is that all five books were written in immediate succession, but some scholars believe that Deuteronomy was written later than the other four books. The traditional Jewish view regarding the authorship of the Pentateuch is
that it was written by Moses under God's order, except for the last eight verses of Deuteronomy which describe the death of Moses and were written by Joshua, Moses's student who became a prophet. In secular scholarly circles by the end of the 19th century, a popular proposition regarding the authorship was the
documentary hypothesis, which has remained quite influential to this day, despite criticism. The books of the prophets are entitled in accordance with the alleged authorship. Some books in the Ketuvim are attributed to important historical figures (e.g., the
Proverbs to
King Solomon, many of the
Psalms to
King David), but it is generally agreed that verification of such authorship claims is extremely difficult if not impossible, and many believe some or even all of the attributions in the
canon and the
apocrypha to be
pseudepigraphal. Scholars believe that the
Song of the Sea (
Exodus 15) was compiled and passed orally before it was quoted in the Book of Exodus and that it is among the most ancient poems in the history of literature, perhaps going back to the 2nd millennium BCE. The
Song of Moses (Deuteronomy 32:1–43) and the
Song of Deborah (
Judges 5) were written in
Archaic Biblical Hebrew, also called Old Hebrew or Paleo-Hebrew (10th–6th centuries BCE, corresponding to the Monarchic Period until the Babylonian Exile).
Samaritan version of the Torah The only descendants of the Israelites who have preserved Hebrew texts are the Jews and the Samaritans and, of the latter, there are but a few hundred left. Both the
Samaritan religion and the indigenous
Samaritan language, which today is used only liturgically, differ somewhat from their Jewish counterparts, though the difference between the
language varieties is only dialectal. The canon of the
Samaritans consists solely of a version of the
Pentateuch. It is slightly different from the Jewish
Masoretic Text version. Most are minor variations in the spelling of words or
grammatical constructions, but others involve significant semantic changes, such as the uniquely Samaritan commandment to construct an altar on
Mount Gerizim. It is to this day written in a script which developed from the
paleo-Hebrew script (namely the
Samaritan script), whereas the common "
Hebrew script" is in fact a stylized version of the
Aramaic script, not of the paleo-Hebrew script. ==Early rabbinic literature==