It doesn't. It only has the Five Books of Moses.
The Torah is the source of the five books: Genesis through Deuteronomy.
The Torah is the first five books of the Old Testament.
The coming of Christ is foretold in the Jewish Torah (the old testament). The new testament documents the birth of Christ, his ministry, death and resurrection as predicted in the Torah.
The Torah is the five books that God gave to Moses. The Torah is considered to be the word of God by Jews. Christians follow the Old Testament which is a variation of the Torah with some mistranslations. To Jews there is nothing old about it, it is the eternal word of God and there is no 'New' Testament.
The Torah comprises the first five books of the Hebrew Tanakh, available in translation under the title "The Old Testament". The Torah has remained unchanged since it was given. Scribes never compose anything; they merely copy an older scroll into a new one, with the utmost care and precision.
According to the New Testament, Jesus was Jewish, and virtually all of his teachings are distortions of things from the Torah.
Leviticus is the third of five books of the Jewish Torah or Pentateuch and thus forms part of the Christian Old Testament.
The Old Testament and the New Testament.The Old Testament starts with Genesis and ends with Malachi.The New Testament starts with Matthew and ends with Revelation.
The Torah comprises the first five books of the Hebrew Tanakh, available in translation under the title "The Old Testament". The Torah has remained unchanged since it was given. Scribes never compose anything; they merely copy an older scroll into a new one, with the utmost care and precision.
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy form The Pentateuch, or The Torah, the 'backbone' of both the Old and New Testament.
Jesus is only foun in the new testament :) Read a bible!
According to the New Testament, yes, Jesus read from the Torah. Whether or not he actually understood its laws is debatable given the way he interacted with the Pharisees.
Answer 1I don't believe the Prophet Muhammad is mentioned in the Jewish Torah, not according the Old Testament anyway!Answer 2It is absolutely certain that Muhammad is not mentioned in any part of the Torah. In fact, he is not mentioned in the rest of the Tanakh either, and nor does his name appear in the New Testament.