Judaism has the Torah, which is made up of 5 books. However, the Tanach (Jewish Bible) has three sections, not five. These sections are: Torah (Teachings), Nevi'im (Prophets), and K'tuvim (Writings).
There is no Hebrew word for canon. If you are referring to the Hebrew bible, it is simply called Tanakh (×ª× ×´×š), which is an acroynom for the 3 parts of the Hebrew Bible: Torah, Nevi'im (prophets), and K'tuvim (writings).
The Hebrew Bible contains twenty-four books which are divided into three parts: the five books of Torah, the Nevi'im, and the Ketuvim. On the other hand, the first part of the Christian Bible is the Old Testament, which contains the twenty-four books of the Hebrew Bible that are divided into thirty-nine books. They are also ordered in a different way than the Hebrew Bible's books.
The Hebrew Bible is a collection 24 ancient books that form the basis of all forms of Judaism. It's three parts are the Torah (תורה), the Prophets (× ×‘×™××™×), and the Writings (כתובים). Furthermore, translations of the Hebrew Bible are included in the Christian Bible, where it is referred to as "the Old Testament". But this term usually only refers to the translated versions of the text.
The Old Testament (or Hebrew Bible) was written almost entirely in Hebrew. Some parts of the Old Testament were written in Aramaic. The New Testament was written in Greek.
The Hebrew month of 'Ziv' corresponded to parts of our April-May.
The Hebrew Bible (×ª× ×´×š) is divided into three parts. The second division is called the Prophets (× ×‘×™××™×).
They felt it was important for the preservation of the Hebrew language. It was also believed that the documents that were not in Hebrew or Aramaic (i.e. that were in Greek) were more corrupted and less reliable.Answer:It wasn't "argued." There was never any question. The Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) contains the prophecies of Israelite prophets, who spoke and wrote in Hebrew. Those few chapters which were given in Aramaic (see parts of the book of Daniel, for example), were preserved in that language. Had the prophets communicated in any other language, the Tanakh would have recorded and preserved their exact words.Note also that, according to Jewish tradition, the canon of the Hebrew Bible was sealed around 340 BCE, in the last years of Hebrew prophecy.
Yes, except for a few passages that are written in Aramaic.Additionally, parts of the Apocrypha and the entire New Testament (which are parts of Christian Bibles but not the Jewish Bible) are in Koine, a form of dialectic Ancient Greek.
Different branches of Christianity - "Churches", as against 'churches' - recognise different books as being valid parts of the Bible.
The two parts of the Bible are the Old Testament and the New Testament.
The Hebrew alphabet is not divided into parts.
The only difference between the "Catholic Bible" and the "protestant Bible" is that the protestant Bible not longer contains the Deuterocanonical books of the Old Testament (Tobit, Judith, Wisdom, Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, I and II Maccabees, parts of Esther, and Daniel. There is no sentence in the Bible that contains a sentence condemning blood transfusions.