Its author did.
Answer:
According to tradition, Moses wrote the entire Torah (Deuteronomy 31:24) at God's dictation (Exodus 24:12).
The Torah says that was done at the Pharaoh's command.
When I went to Greece, I decided to visit the Acropolis.
When he went to spend 40 days on mount Sinai.
Jews are the only nation who agreed to accept god's Torah, even before hearing the laws. god went to the other nations first, but the other nations wanted to kill and steal and do other bad things that the Torah forbids, so they did not want to accept the Torah
yes. nobody went as much & they decided to shut it down.
Carlos and you went to the park when you decided to join your friends in a game of disc golf. (the pronoun 'you' can be singular or plural)OR:Carlos and I went to the park and wedecided to join our friends in a game of disc golf.
She decided to snub him.Do not snub your teacher.The boss decided to snub the complaints, so the office went on strike.
Number one went to the first person processed, number two went to the second person processed, and so forth.
We know they made an agreement. We do not know how the discussion went.
The planet Uranus was once named after King George III of England. When he went mad, astrologers decided to change the name to Uranus to avoid association with the king's mental illness.
The Tzdukim (Sadducees) were a breakaway group who turned their back on the authority of the Torah sages. They continued in the ways of the Hellenising Jews. They were active in politics and intrigue and had no interest in the Torah. At that time the Jewish courts still had the ability to enforce the Torah laws; and almost all Jews were Torah-observant; so, in order to avoid total rejection by the surrounding community, the Sadducees outwardly maintained a facade of keeping the major Torah precepts (such as the Sabbath), while ignoring the Oral Torah and customs and flouting the words of the Sages. They went lost not long after.
The Tzdukim (Sadducees) were a breakaway group who turned their back on the authority of the Torah sages. They continued in the ways of the Hellenising Jews. They were active in politics and intrigue and had no interest in the Torah. At that time the Jewish courts still had the ability to enforce the Torah laws; and almost all Jews were Torah-observant; so, in order to avoid total rejection by the surrounding community, the Sadducees outwardly maintained a facade of keeping the major Torah precepts (such as the Sabbath), while ignoring the Oral Torah and customs and flouting the words of the Sages. They went lost not long after.