One period is the Babylonian period , Daniel was the prophet, And Samuel king Sauls period.
You need to answer this prompt. I suggest you use a Venn diagram to highlight the major differences. We don't do essays or homework.
A:The 3 distinct periods were: The Old KingdomThe Middle KingdomThe New Kingdom
Eons, eras, and periods, from large to small.
Paleolitich ,Mesolithic ,and Neolithic.
The Major Prophets are 'ahead' of the Minor Prophets only because of the length of their books. Their specific messages are not any more important than those of the the Minor Prophets; they simply have longer inspired, canonical messages. Some of the Minor Prophets, particularly Amos, lived before such Major Prophets as Jeremiah. The Book of the Prophet Isaiah also apparently comprises the oracles and messages of three prophets in succession, contributing to its length.Open in Google Docs ViewerOpen link in new tabOpen link in new windowOpen link in new incognito windowDownload fileCopy link addressEdit PDF File on PDFescape.com
The three periods were: Preclassic, Classic, and Postclassic.
Try, Joshua, 1 & 2 Samuel, Tobit, Judith, Esther, Ruth, + the three major and 12 minor prophets. Quite a lot really.
In the Old Testament. The major prophets are: Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekial and Daniel.Additionally:Generally speaking... the sheer size of the above prophet's prophetic books are bigger than those of the "minor prophets."As "Halley's Bible Handbook with the King James Version" explains:"...This classification [the difference between major and minor prophets] is based on the size of the books. Any one of the three books of Isaiah, Jeremiah or Ezekiel is in itself alone larger than all 12 of the Minor Prophets combined together. Daniel is about the combined size of the two Minor Prophets Hosea and Zechariah..." (Halley's Bible Handbook with the King James Version" Classic Edition; p.280, The Prophets).
The Tanach only has three sections, not four. The Tanakh consists of The Torah (Teachings), Nevi'im (Prophets), and K'tuvim (Writings).
The Hebrew Bible divides its books into three categories, the Torah ("Instructions"), the Nevi'im ("Prophets") (according to some Christians, essentially historical, despite the title), and the Ketuvim ("Writings").
The three divisions of Jewish scripture are known by the Hebrew acronym Tanakh. (That's 3 letters in Hebrew). The divisions are Torah (pentateuch), Nevi'im (Prophets), and Ketuvim (Writings).
Jeremiah, Jonah and Joel Type your answer here...