If you are talking about the Christian Bible, the letters of St. Paul comprise a large chunk of the Christian portion of The Bible, although he didn't write all of them. The Jewish parts of the Bible have traditional authors, but these are probably more legendary than accurate. The Pentateuch is likely the work of many hands. The prophetic book of Isaiah is really quite long, so Isaiah may be the largest contributor to the Jewish Bible.
Kakinomoto no Hitomaro wrote the most poems about Tanabata.
Andrew Lloyd Webber wrote the songs and the words thats what i thought too. No Andrew Lloyd Webber wrote the music and most of the lines, but antother guy wrote most of the phantoms lines.
People who could write at the time Shakespeare wrote most likely wrote. I assume at least one of your (the reader or who the reader is reading to) ancestors wrote unless I'm wrong somehow.
Elizabethan
Jagger wrote most of the lyrics to go along with a basic riff and music written by Richards in '65.
god
St. Paul (formerly Saul of Taurus) wrote most (not all) of the letters in the Bible.
St paul
most were written by the Apostale Paul.
Most of the men were Hebrew.
Luke
"Luke2123" is not a standard phrase or term. It may refer to a specific context or code that is not widely recognized. If you have more information or context, I may be able to provide a more accurate explanation.
No, Moses wrote more.
The wisest man who has ever lived King Solomon wrote Proverbs.
Paul was the most prolific of the New Testament writers.
Tradition has Moses writing the first five books of the Bible. See related link:
Jesus never wrote a Bible. The Bible was written by around 40 people over 1500 years. Some of the Bible is about Jesus' life but Jesus never wrote any of the Bible