Shortly before his death, he wrote (Deuteronomy 31:24) Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy. One traditional source (Talmud, Bava Batra 14b) also ascribes the book of Job to Moses.
The Old Testament was completed by the second century BCE, long before Paul lived. He did not write any books in the Old Testament.
No, Saint Luke did not write any books of the Old Testament. He is traditionally believed to have authored the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles in the New Testament.
AnswerThe books of the Old Testament were all written before 100 BCE, so could not have been written by the apostle John.
Traditionally, Moses is said to have written the first five books of the Old Testament, known to Christians as the Pentateuch. However, some scholars now say that it is clear that Moses did not write any of the Old Testament, and that the scriptures only began to be written many centuries after the time attributed to him. On this evidence, Moses did not write any books of the Old Testament, and he did not write any other books that we know of.For more information, please see:http://christianity.answers.com/theology/moses-in-history-and-traditionhttp://christianity.answers.com/bible/the-pentateuch-explained
No. John the Baptist did not write any books in the New Testament.
As far as we know, Moses never even wrote any books. Certainly, it is true that the first five books of the Bible are traditionally attributed to him, but that attribution is no more than tradition. There is nothing in the five books themselves to suggest, directly or indirectly, that Moses had any part in writing them. There is a wealth of evidence in the same books, that Moses did not and could not have written them. Moses never wrote any books that we know of, so none has been omitted from the Bible.
Paul wrote 13 or 14, books in the New Testament. Some believe that he wrote the book of Hebrews. Thus the possible 14. Hebrews has many stylistic similarities to Paul's other works. Moses, however, in his five Old Testament books, wrote more words than any other author.
He didn't write any books.
Any four books? Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers
John the Baptist was not one of the writers of the New Testament. The fourth gospel is ascribed to the Apostle John and so is the book of Revelation or Apocalypse. John the apostle however is a different person than John the baptist.
Well, this question is stated in a funny way. Really, we don't know anything about what Moses did or didn't want. This is what we do know about him:Moses is a character in the Torah, which is the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, also known as the Old Testament to Christians. He is given credit for taking dictation of these five books while the character of God himself narrated what to write down. Thus, from a biblical perspective, Moses did not write any of the bible. He simply wrote down what God told him to write down.As far as the Ten Commandments themselves, God considered them so central and so important that HE wanted to write them down Himself. So the Ten Commandments are the only part of the entire Bible that were written by the actual "finger of God": A fiery flame that etched these ten sayings into tablets of stone that could be read from both the front or the back.
No Mary Pope Osborne did not write any other books