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.
It appears that the "Assumption of Moses" was never considered a part of the canon of Scripture.
The Protestants do not think any books are missing from their Bible.
I would not imagine there was any books in the bible without the word god in it. Apart from Esther, which never mentions God, I don't believe there are any others.
There is no such thing. The Qur'an is a single book (unlike the Bible which is an anthology of numerous books). Additionally, the Qur'an does not contain any sections of the Bible (although it refers to many Biblical events).
Good question, but I don't know if you mean the whole Bible, or just any part of the Bible. Or it could be the Whole Old testament. If it is who used any part of the Bible, I would say Moses. He used the 10 commandments; they are part of the Bible. Someone else may have a better answer.
There aren't any as Genesis - means beginnings - is the first book.
The Torah is the Five Books of Moses. It is the holiest of Jewish books. The Tanach, which is the Hebrew Bible, contains the Torah, the Prophets and the Scriptures. Together, these make up the written law.
There are more than four books of the bible.
In all that is written of Moses in the Bible (which is a great deal), there is no mention of any such thing.
The Protestants do not think any books are missing from their Bible.
AnswerAs far as we know, Moses never left a written record, in fact most scholars do not believe that the events associated with Moses even happened. The first five books of the Bible, known to Christians as the Pentateuch, are traditionally said to have been written by Moses, but the internal evidence indicates otherwise, and scholars say that these books were really written many centuries after the time attributed to Moses.
I don't think he did, but look in the bible to be sure
... The Bible
no
The Bible.
From the time of Abraham to Moses, the laws were not formally written down. From the time of Moses up until today, The Torah, (first 5 books of the Bible) contains the 613 commandments that the Hebrews had to follow and that all Jews should follow, in one form or another.
There are no laws in the bible.Laws are legislature made by a society or country which only apply to that society or country.A:The first five books of the Bible (the Pentateuch) are known as the books of the law (Hebrew Torah, teaching) because they are based in the Commandments (laws) that God revealed to Moses. The second commandment (or law) given to Moses is "Thou shall not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth" (Exodus 20:4).
no