Old Testament: Difference between revisions
From Cunnan
Jump to navigationJump to search
Paul Matisz (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Paul Matisz (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The '''Old Testament''' is the [[Christian]] term for the books of the [[Jew]]ish scriptures. Comprised of between 28 and 40 [[book]]s (depending on editing and whether or not the apocrypha are included. |
The '''Old Testament''' is the [[Christian]] term for the books of the [[Jew]]ish scriptures. Comprised of between 28 and 40 [[book]]s (depending on editing and whether or not the apocrypha are included. |
||
The Old Testament, while comprising the bulk of the Jewish scriptures (along with the Talmud, the |
The Old Testament, while comprising the bulk of the Jewish scriptures (along with the Talmud, the books of Jewish law), is also viewed as the first part of Christian scripture, followed by the [[New Testament]], which is entirely an account of the life of Jesus and the deeds of his followers after his death on the [[cross]], and not accepted as scriptural by Jews. |
||
In [[period]], stories and parables from the Old Testament stories were popular, well-known, and often accepted as the literal, historical truth. |
In [[period]], stories and parables from the Old Testament stories were popular, well-known, and often accepted as the literal, historical truth. |
Revision as of 14:36, 3 October 2007
The Old Testament is the Christian term for the books of the Jewish scriptures. Comprised of between 28 and 40 books (depending on editing and whether or not the apocrypha are included.
The Old Testament, while comprising the bulk of the Jewish scriptures (along with the Talmud, the books of Jewish law), is also viewed as the first part of Christian scripture, followed by the New Testament, which is entirely an account of the life of Jesus and the deeds of his followers after his death on the cross, and not accepted as scriptural by Jews.
In period, stories and parables from the Old Testament stories were popular, well-known, and often accepted as the literal, historical truth.