You're asking about "tekhelet", the blue thread on the tassels. It's mentioned in the Jewish Bible, but you can also buy it at Jewish stores.
It is written in the bible to wear garments with four corners and fringes attached to these corners. wearing a tallit is doing what is commanded.
The 613 Commandments in the Jewish Bible.
AnswerThe Bible twice commands us to put fringes (tzitzit) on each of the corners of a four-cornered garment.Numbers 15:38: "Speak to the children of Israel, and say to them, that they shall make themselves fringes on the corners of their garmentsthroughout their generations, and they shall put on the corner fringe a blue (tekhelet) thread."Deuteronomy 22:12: "You shall make yourself twisted threads, on the four corners of your garment with which you cover yourself."In order to fulfill this commandment - in an age when four-cornered garments are not usually worn - Jews wear the Tallit (Prayer Shawl) during daily morning prayers.The large tallit is alluded to in the Talmud, Rosh Hashanah 17b, and Daniel 7:9.Jews also wear a smaller tallit under their shirts to fulfill this commandment.
the original bible was written in latin!
Erik Rottmann has written: 'Portals Everyday' 'Rahab's red thread' -- subject(s): English Bible stories, Bible stories, Juvenile literature, O.T., O.T. Joshua, History 'Guide Me, Lord' 'Barabbas Goes Free' 'Timothy Joins Paul: Acts 16:1-6' 'The Easter Victory'
noAnswer:That's, "Keep your friends close and your enemies closer." But, I think it's the philosophical thread of the Mafia... not the Bible.
The first written account in the Bible is Exodus.
When the Bible was written, paper was not invented. The Bible was first written on clay tablets. Then it was written on animal skin and kept in stone jars to preserve them. It was then written on papyrus. Now it is written on paper.
She asked the nurse for a needle and thread, a toothbrush, a bar of soap, and a Bible.
The bible was written by God.
The Bible says nothing about the Kabbalah, which was written after the Bible.
no