1272 BCE, according to traditional chronology. Non-traditional opinions may put this in an earlier year. See also:
Great question! Moses perhaps? The first books of the bible are guessed to be written down by Moses.
Moses did not write about Jesus specifically in the Bible. The Old Testament, which includes the books traditionally attributed to Moses, contains prophecies and foreshadowing of Jesus, but Moses himself did not write about him.
According to tradition, Moses wrote the first five books of the Bible (Deuteronomy 31:24), after God taught them to him (Exodus 24:12).
According to tradition, Moses wrote the first five books of the Bible (Deuteronomy 31:24), after God taught them to him (Exodus 24:12).
No. It was first codified by tradition via Moses - an Israelite.
The first five books of the Bible, known collectively as the Pentateuch, are traditionally attributed to Moses. A well known problem with this is that the Pentateuch reports the death of Moses. One solution put forward is that God told Moses of his own future, while another, more plausible solution is that The Pentateuch was completed after his death. Another, less well known problem with authorship by Moses is that his own father-in-law is given three different names in different places. You would expect that Moses would at least know the name of his own father-in-law! In fact, scholars tell us that the Pentateuch had not one, but four different authors, and was written many centuries after the time attributed to Moses. This is why there are so many 'doublets' - passages written twice and in each case somewhat differently. It is also the reason that the writing style changes from place to place, and why early Hebrew is mixed with a later version of the Hebrew language. Moses did not write the first books of the Bible and, of course, did not write of his own death.
There was no Bible for Moses to use because he was the first man that wrote the Bible. Moses was inspired to write the first five books that are now a part of the Bible as we know it today. Moses was born in 1593 B.C. and the exodus from Egypt took place in 1513 B.C. Soon after the Exodus, Moses began writing (under divine inspiration) and by 1473 B.C. (40 years) he compiled all the them: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers & Deuteronomy. After Moses death in 1473 B.C., Joshua continued recording the history of the nation of Israel. Moses got his strength from his very strong relationship with Almighty God Jehovah.
The books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy together are refered to as the Pentateuch (pronounced pin-ta-took). These books were written in the wilderness outside of Egypt and the Plains of Moab by Moses. It took him about 40 years to write the books, from about 1513 B.C.E. to about 1473 B.C.E.
Scripture was written over many centuries. The Laws of Moses known at the Torah in the Hebrew Bible (or the first 5 books in the Old Testament) were by tradition given to Moses by God to write down. According to some scholars the time of the Exodus is approximately 1270 BCE. The Torah was canonized as early as 400 BC and the final writings as late as 100 AD. The Christian New Testament was written in the first and second centuries.
Well, this question is stated in a funny way. Really, we don't know anything about what Moses did or didn't want. This is what we do know about him:Moses is a character in the Torah, which is the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, also known as the Old Testament to Christians. He is given credit for taking dictation of these five books while the character of God himself narrated what to write down. Thus, from a biblical perspective, Moses did not write any of the bible. He simply wrote down what God told him to write down.As far as the Ten Commandments themselves, God considered them so central and so important that HE wanted to write them down Himself. So the Ten Commandments are the only part of the entire Bible that were written by the actual "finger of God": A fiery flame that etched these ten sayings into tablets of stone that could be read from both the front or the back.
John Bunyan didn't write any books of the bible.
No