Tag: Hebrew Bible

  • Where Is The Reference To The Bible

    India and Hinsuim is pilloried for its tardiness in maintaing its History.

     

    There  are no historical references, no continuity in Indian History nor any official crdible History.

     

    This is the view among most of the Indians, that most of Indian History is a fable.

     

    The west is not far from holding this view.

     

    Is this a Fact?

     

    Let us look at some facts.

     

    1.References of Hindu Epics and The Veda are found in the literature that existed in the corresponding period where/when they came  into existence.

     

    I have not used the term written as the Vedas, it is believed were not written and they were transmitted orally over Five Thousand Years.

     

     

    The Mahabharata refers to the Ramayana.

     

     

    The Puranas refer to both Ramayana and the Bible, not to speak of the Vedas.

     

    All the literary works in India refer to the Vedas, Ramayana and the Mahabharata.

     

    These are works belonging to the years before Christ.

     

    2.Post Christ Era.

     

    All the works in India refer to all of these at least in the two languages I know, Sanskrit and Tamil, of these Tamil is at least 500 year old.

     

    Tamil works of the Sangam period which are t least 500 years older than the Bible quotes the Hindu Epics and the Vedas.

     

    Old Testament.jpg
    Old Testament.

     

    One of the major tools in determing the existence of a Literay work or event is the cross refernce in the  Text, refernce to it by works of the same period

    and its refernce to it at least in the earliest succeeding work.

     

    Hinduism fulfills these tests.

     

    What about the Bible?

     

    Bible is taken so seriously that people have fixed even time scale on Christ!

     

    Has the Bible been referred to in the works of the same period or in the period immediately succeeding it?

     

    I do not seem to find it anywhere.

     

    Excepting Bible refrences in the non Cannonical texts of the Bible.

     

    All the cannonical texts are taken as  a part of the Bible.

     

    This is like Ramayana proving Ramyana in itself!-by taliking about it in The Ramayana.

     

    And the Hebrew Bible called Hebrew Bible, also known as the Tanakh by Jews, is the earliest refernce to The Bible.

     

    And the Tanakh is dated at  2 Century BC, that is 200 Years before Christ!

     

    4.

    “Perhaps the most obvious way that the Bible has inspired writers can be seen in the ways that works of literature actually retell stories found in the Bible. John Milton’s Paradise Lost, for example, retells the biblical fall of man in a long, epic poem, including Satan’s rebellion against God and Adam and Eve’s expulsion from Eden.

    Similarly, John Steinbeck‘s East of Eden is roughly structured around the biblical story of Cain and Abel. Another example can be seen in C.S. Lewis’s The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Following the biblical story of God as the all-powerful savior, Lewis uses the Bible to create parts of his plot,   by especially with the return of King Aslan, which parallels Jesus’s return.

    Other writers take images in the Bible and expand on them or use them as a setting, such as Dante, who used the Bible’s description of the afterlife to create an epic 3-volume poem that explores Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven, titled the Divine Comedy.”

     

     

    And Dante’s period is  1265–1321 !, full 1200 Years after Christ.

     

    Why there is no reference to The Bible at all in the earlier works between the Bible and the Divine Comedy?

     

     

    Perhaps there was no literature!

     

    3.The Bible should have been referred to corresponding literature of the same period.

     

    I do not find any reference at all.

     

    Now which History is credible?

     

    Hinduism where Rama’s and Krishna’s dates have been proved,places mentioned have been identified, refernces to them are found every where in Indian Literature,in Japan,Cambodia, Laos,Lanka, Russia, Italy,Americas,and Africa or

     

    The Bible and the western History?

     

     

    http://education-portal.com/academy/lesson/the-bible-as-literary-influence-references-and-allusion.html#lesson

  • Deadsea Scrolls.

    Discovery

    The scrolls were found in 11 caves, ranging in distance of 125m (Cave 4) to about 1000m (Cave 1) from the settlement at Qumran, located 1km off the northwest shore of the Dead Sea. None of them were found at the actual settlement. It is generally accepted that a Bedouin goat- or sheep-herder by the name of Mohammed Ahmed el-Hamed (nicknamed edh-Dhib, “the wolf”) made the first discovery toward the beginning of 1947.

    In the most commonly told story the shepherd threw a rock into a cave in an attempt to drive out a missing animal under his care. The shattering sound of pottery drew him into the cave, where he found several ancient jars containing scrolls wrapped in linen. Another theory was that two young boys were looking for a lost goat and came upon some of them.

    Dr. John C. Trever carried out a number of interviews with several men going by the name of Muhammed edh-Dhib, each relating a variation on this tale.

    The scrolls were first brought to a Bethlehem antiquities dealer named Ibrahim ‘Ijha, who returned them after being warned that they may have been stolen from a synagogue. The scrolls then fell into the hands of Khalil Eskander Shahin, “Kando”, a cobbler and antiques dealer. By most accounts the Bedouin removed only three scrolls following their initial find, later revisiting the site to gather more, possibly encouraged by Kando. Alternatively, it is postulated that Kando engaged in his own illegal excavation: Kando himself possessed at least four scrolls.

    Arrangements with the Bedouins left the scrolls in the hands of a third party until a sale of them could be negotiated. That third party, George Isha’ya, was a member of the Syrian Orthodox Church, who soon contacted St. Mark’s Monastery in the hope of getting an appraisal of the nature of the texts. News of the find then reached Metropolitan Athanasius Yeshue Samuel, more often referred to as Mar Samuel.

    Related;

    The Hebrew Bible (also Hebrew Scriptures, Latin Biblia Hebraica) is a term referring to the texts of the Jewish Bible (Hebrew: תנ”ך‎ Tanakh, an acronym for תורה נביאים כתוביםTorah, Nevi’im, Ketuvim“), composed in Biblical Hebrew. Also included are the portions in Biblical Aramaic (this concerns the Book of Daniel, besides some parts of the Book of Ezra and a few other passages).

    The term “Hebrew Bible” is an attempt to provide specificity with respect to contents, while avoiding allusion to any particular interpretative tradition or theological school of thought. It is widely used in academic writing and interfaith discussion in relatively neutral contexts meant to include dialogue amongst all religious traditions, but not widely in the inner discourse of the religions which use its text. The term closely corresponds to contents of the Jewish Tanakh and the Protestant Old Testament (see also Judeo-Christian) and does not include the deuterocanonical portions of the Roman Catholic or the Anagignoskomena portions of the Eastern Orthodox Old Testaments. The term does not imply naming, numbering or ordering of books, which varies with Biblical canon.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=193857

    Jerusalem, Israel and Google have joined forces to put the Dead Sea Scrolls, the oldest surviving biblical texts, online, Xinhua reported.

    http://topinews.com/mainstream/2010/10/20/israel-google-to-bring-dead-sea-scrolls-online/40827/

     

    Link:

    http://translate.dc.gov/ma/enwiki/en/Dead_Sea_scrolls

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