Yes, there are 2:
1. Babylonian Talmud (started in the beginning of the 3rd century C.E. and completed 6th century C.E.)
2. Jerusalem Talmud (completed 350 C.E.)
-- There is the "Talmud Bavli" (Babylonian Talmud), mostly in Aramaic, compiled of debates and deliberations that took place during the Babylonian exile. The Talmud Bavli is the definitive text.
-- And there is the "Talmud Yerushalmi" (Jerusalem Talmud), mostly in Hebrew, compiled of debates and deliberations that took place among the scholars who
remained in Israel during the Babylonian exile.
Please see the related link for additional information.
The Talmud is the in-depth explanation of the Torah; one doesn't make sense without the other.
Definitely. The sheer number of individuals who attend regularly scheduled classes in Talmud is almost certainly greater today than ever before, in all of history since the Talmud was compiled.
Tana Kama is an Aramaic term found throughout the Talmud. It means "the first teacher." When the Talmud quotes a teaching which includes more than one name, in the ensuing discussion it will often use the phrase "tana kama" to refer back to the first name quoted in the teaching.
Psalms - no. Those are found in the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible). Proverbs - those too are in the Tanakh, though the Talmud also has some. But the Talmud contains much more than that. See the attached Related Link. The Talmud is primarily a book of legal analysis which presents issues and then comments on viable solutions within Jewish parameters.
No. The Talmud is a collection of discussions, arguments, and commentariesabout the Hebrew Bible.==============================-- It's intriguing how many questions on Jewish scripture, law, and practiceposted here are written in the past tense, like this one, that asks "Was theTalmud ... ".It's very likely that there are more people studying the Talmud regularly today ...year 2011 ... than there have ever been at any other time in Jewish history.There are hundreds of classes that meet daily, wherever Jewish communities exist,and study one page of Talmud a day, worldwide. Today. The daily page and itsexplanation are also widely available on the internet. Today.-- Any rabbi can tell you more about the Talmud. Make a phone call and an appointment.If you don't do that, then the only things you'll think you know will be what you hear fromthose who tell you that the Talmud was a book of magic, and similar baloney.
The Torah and its Talmud-commentary (Jewish law) contain thousands of details, laws, customs, attitudes and beliefs. Some Jews observe more and some observe less, but these observances all come from the Torah.
There are two kinds of rules. One is the mitzvot (commands) of the Torah, and the other is the halakhot (laws) of the Talmud. The Talmud explains the Torah's laws, provides further detail, and renders precise rulings in specific circumstances. Here's an example: one mitzva (command) of the Torah is to recite the Shema prayer (Deuteronomy ch.6). The Talmud discusses details such as if you may recite the Shema earlier than the prescribed time (Talmud, Berakhot 9a).
'when more than one are' is the correct phrase.
Performing more than one roles. Having more than one areas of responsibility or activity. Performing more than one roles. Having more than one areas of responsibility or activity. Performing more than one roles. Having more than one areas of responsibility or activity. Performing more than one roles. Having more than one areas of responsibility or activity.
In Judaism, the answer is no (Talmud, Berakhot 16b).
One shekel more than 249, one fewer than 251. One shekel more than 249, one fewer than 251. One shekel more than 249, one fewer than 251. One shekel more than 249, one fewer than 251.
more than one radius