Concept cluster: History > Hebrew Bible or Tanakh
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(Judaism, Christianity) A fallen angel in some traditions of Judaism and Christianity.
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The first five books of the Hebrew Bible.
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(Judaism) Any book of the Pentateuch.
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(biblical, Judaism) A class of angel found in Kabbalah from the Zohar.
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One of four sources of the Torah described by the documentary hypothesis, characterized by an abstract view of God.
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(Judaism) The third division of the Hebrew scriptures; the Ketuvim.
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The Tanakh (תנ״ך)
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A text presented in six parallel versions, especially (historical) the version of the Old Testament presented in such a fashion by Origen.
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(biblical) The seventh book of the Old Testament, and a book of the Hebrew Tanakh.
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(religion) A pseudepigraphic writing of the Old Testament, preserved only in Slavonic and not generally regarded as scripture.
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(Judaism) the five Books of Moses, particularly the commandments in it, as well as their specification in the Mishnah and their further interpretation in later religious literature
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(biblical) Lazarus of Bethany, a man supposedly raised from the dead by Jesus Christ and later (Christianity) revered as a saint.
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The collection of marginal notes on the text of the Hebrew Scriptures, composed by rabbis of the school of Tiberias, in the 8th-9th centuries CE.
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(Judaism) any of the Five Scrolls of the Hebrew Scriptures (Song of Songs, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, and Esther)
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(Judaism) Either one of the two Books of Kings (1 Kings = Melachim Aleph; 2 Kings = Melachim Bet).
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The oldest part of the Talmud, rabbinical writings collected by Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi and published in 250 C.E. in Javneh (יבנה, in Israel).
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The Torah: the first five books of the Bible: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.
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(biblical) A woman mentioned in Mark 16:1, present at the crucifixion of Christ.
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(biblical) The twice-daily sacrifice of two male lambs by the priesthood.
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Alternative form of Tanakh [The body of Jewish scripture comprising the Torah, the Neviim (prophets) and the Ketuvim (writings), corresponding roughly to the Christian Old Testament.]
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The body of Jewish scripture comprising the Torah, the Neviim (prophets) and the Ketuvim (writings), corresponding roughly to the Christian Old Testament.
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(Judaism) An Aramaic translation of the Tanakh written or compiled between the Second Temple period and the early Middle Ages.
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The full body of written Jewish law, including the Tanakh, the Talmud, the Mishnah and the midrashic texts.
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The hypothesis that the Torah (the first five books of the Bible) was derived from originally independent, parallel, and complete narratives, which were subsequently combined into the current form by a series of redactors.
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Joshua
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Known as the "Tetragrammaton", the four Hebrew letters יהוה which are transliterated into the Latin alphabet as YHWH (or IHVH, JHVH, or YHVH). Usually vowels are added to produce the spelling Jehovah, Yehovah or Yahweh (Jahaveh, Jahve, Jahveh, Jahweh, Yahve, Yahveh, Yahwe).

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