תַּנַ״ךְ‎

Tanakh

Hebrew Bible

The Tanakh Is the Hebrew Bible. The Tanakh comprises 24 Books with 419,687 words. The Tanakh is primarily initially written in Biblical Hebrew, with a few passages in Biblical Aramaic (in the books of Daniel and Ezra and the verse Jeremiah 10:11). The Hebrew Bible is the canonical collection of Hebrew Scriptures, with three sections including the Torah, the Nevi'im, and the Ketuvim, in that order. The Torah, the five books of Moses, was the first to be canonized during the first Temple period, 516 BCE to 70 BCE. The second section of the Tanakh, the Nevi'im, was canonized somewhere between 200 BCE to 100 BCE. The last section of the Tanakh, the Ketuvim, was canonized between 100 CE and 200 CE. The total time it took to canonize the Tanakh is about 700 years, but the books date to a much older time. The Torah is God's laws or rules not to be changed ever, not even a single letter, and the Nevi’im is the section of the prophets and their message to a sinning nation. Many examples of ways a nation should not behave are in the Nevi’im and the prophets delivering God’s judgment on them. The final section of the Tanakh is the Ketuvim, or the Writings, a section of songs and poems. In this section of songs and poems, you will find examples of how to come back to God after you have failed (after repentance) because, without repentance, no amount of promises to God or prayers to Him will do you any good. God does not want empty promises or prayers from a sinful heart.

Hebrew Bible Sections

Currently working on Torah

Books of the Prophets

NEVI’IM

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Books of Writings

KETUVIM

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