The Hebrew Bible gives the biography of Abraham (Genesis ch.11-25), including in some detail:
1) His journeys to Harran, Canaan and Egypt
2) His involvement in the War of the Kings
3) His covenants with God
4) The birth of Ishmael
5) The birth of Isaac in Abraham's and Sarah's old age
6) Abraham's prayer for Sodom, and the city's destruction
7) Abraham's dealings with Abimelech king of Gerar
8) The trial of the Akeidah
9) The purchase of the burial site of Machpelah
10) sending Abraham's servant to seek a wife for Isaac
Describing these in greater detail would go beyond the scope of this answer. The recommended thing to do is to see the original source. See also the attached Related Link.
The Hebrew Bible is not Babylonian.The Hebrew Bible is not Babylonian.
In the Hebrew Bible it says Methuselah lived to be 969 years old.
It says they left Egypt in haste.
The bible says the Hebrew people were guided in the day by a pillar of cloud. And a cloud also guided the wise men.
Moses was of Hebrew descent, belonging to the Israelite tribe of Levi. According to the Bible, Moses was born in Egypt during a time when the Israelites were enslaved by the Egyptians.
Because the bible says god chose the Hebrew people as his people.
The closest translation of the keyword "Bible" in the Hebrew Bible is "Tanakh."
A:The ambiguity of this question hides its very ambiguity. The Bible, at least the Old Testament part of it, is the Hebrew Bible, and nothing else. We can discuss differences found in ancient manuscripts, and whether the Masoretic text more accurately reflects earlier books than does the Septuagint, but these are usually trivial matters. From this perspective, the Hebrew Bible most certainly is the real Bible.Another perspective is whether the Hebrew Bible is divine truth, because the Bible ought to be truth, divinely inspired or otherwise. On this, faith says, "yes", while research says, "no." There are too many well-known historical and scientific errors in the Bible for it to be all-true. What about spiritual truth? That again is a matter for individual faith.
No. There is no mention of Romans in the Hebrew Bible. The Romans conquered Judea After the Hebrew Bible was already canonized.
No book in the Hebrew bible has a title that means "minister" in Hebrew.
AnswerNo. If King David really existed, he was a Hebrew. The Bible says that he was a son of Jesse. On the other hand the pharaohs were Egyptians and unrelated to the Hebrew people.
The Hebrew Bible is called the Tanakh in Hebrew. The word Tanakh is an acronym made from the names of its three sections:Torah (Teachings)Nevi'im (Prophets)K'tuvim (Writings)See also:More about the Hebrew Bible