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Glossary›Hebrew Bible

Glossary

Hebrew Bible

The canonical collection of ancient Hebrew scriptures comprising the Torah, Prophets, and Writings—known as Tanakh in Jewish tradition and the Old Testament in Christian contexts.

What is Hebrew Bible?

The Hebrew Bible is the canonical collection of ancient Jewish texts written primarily in Biblical Hebrew, with some portions in Aramaic, that forms the foundational scripture of Judaism and constitutes the Old Testament of Christian Bibles. The tradition refers to this corpus as Tanakh, an acronym derived from its three divisions: Torah (Teaching/Law), Nevi’im (Prophets), and Ketuvim (Writings). These 24 books—counted differently as 39 in Christian enumeration due to subdivision—span narratives, laws, poetry, prophecy, and wisdom literature composed and compiled over approximately one thousand years. The texts encompass creation accounts, ancestral narratives of the Israelite people, the exodus from Egypt, covenant law given at Sinai, historical chronicles of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, prophetic oracles, psalms, proverbs, and apocalyptic visions.

Origins & Lineage

The texts that comprise the Hebrew Bible originated between approximately 1200 BCE and 165 BCE, though scholarly dating remains contested. The Torah—Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy—was traditionally attributed to Moses, though contemporary biblical scholarship identifies multiple source documents (designated J, E, D, and P by the Documentary Hypothesis) redacted into final form during or after the Babylonian exile (6th century BCE). The Prophets include both historical books (Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings) and prophetic oracles from figures like Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, composed roughly between the 8th and 5th centuries BCE. The Writings—the latest canonical division—contains Psalms attributed to King David and others, Proverbs linked to Solomon, Job, the five Megillot (scrolls read on festivals), Daniel, and the historical books of Ezra-Nehemiah and Chronicles, with the latest texts (Daniel, certain Psalms) dating to the 2nd century BCE.

The process of canonization was gradual. The Torah achieved authoritative status by the 5th century BCE under Ezra. The Prophets were likely canonized by the 3rd century BCE. The Writings remained fluid longest, with the final boundaries debated among Jewish authorities until the Council of Jamnia discussions (circa 90 CE), though scholars now question whether this council formalized the canon definitively. The Masoretes, Jewish scribal scholars working between the 6th and 10th centuries CE, established the authoritative Hebrew text (the Masoretic Text) with vowel pointing and cantillation marks, preserving pronunciation and liturgical chanting traditions.

How It’s Practiced

Engagement with the Hebrew Bible in Jewish tradition centers on liturgical reading, study, and interpretive commentary. In synagogue worship, the Torah is read aloud in an annual or triennial cycle from handwritten scrolls, with designated portions (parashiyot) assigned to each Sabbath and festival. Haftarah readings from the Prophets accompany Torah portions thematically. The text is chanted using traditional cantillation (trope) marks that guide melodic patterns varying by community tradition (Ashkenazi, Sephardi, Yemenite).

Study practice emphasizes close textual analysis through the interpretive tradition of midrash and peshat (plain meaning) versus derash (interpretive elaboration). Classical commentaries by Rashi (11th century), Maimonides (12th century), and others form layered readings preserved in Talmudic and rabbinic literature. Traditional study occurs in chevruta (paired learning), where partners vocally debate interpretations. Psalms are recited in daily prayer services, and specific biblical books are read on festivals: Song of Songs at Passover, Ruth at Shavuot, Lamentations on Tisha B’Av, Ecclesiastes at Sukkot, and Esther at Purim.

Christian practice incorporates Hebrew Bible texts as prophetic preparation for New Testament fulfillment, reading selections as Old Testament lectionary passages in worship. Academic biblical studies employs historical-critical methods, literary analysis, archaeology, and comparative ancient Near Eastern studies to contextualize composition and meaning.

Hebrew Bible Today

Contemporary seekers encounter the Hebrew Bible through multiple avenues. Jewish institutions offer Torah study classes ranging from introductory surveys to advanced textual seminars employing traditional commentaries alongside modern scholarship. Many synagogues host weekly parasha study groups examining the current Torah portion. Online platforms like Sefaria provide free access to Hebrew texts with English translation and classical commentaries. Academic institutions offer courses in biblical Hebrew, allowing direct engagement with the original language.

Interfaith study groups explore Hebrew Bible texts as shared scriptural heritage among Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions. Contemplative reading practices adapted from Lectio Divina invite meditative engagement with biblical passages. Some spiritual seekers approach wisdom literature—Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes—as resources for mindfulness and ethical reflection divorced from institutional religious frameworks. Archaeological museums and biblical history tours in Israel connect textual narratives to material evidence from ancient sites.

Common Misconceptions

The Hebrew Bible is not synonymous with the Christian Old Testament in content or order; Catholic and Orthodox Bibles include additional deuterocanonical books (Maccabees, Wisdom, Sirach) absent from the Jewish canon. It is not a single unified book but an anthology spanning diverse genres, authors, and theological perspectives, including internal contradictions (compare the two creation accounts in Genesis 1 and 2, or differing chronologies in Kings versus Chronicles).

The text does not exist in a single “original” manuscript; all versions derive from copies of copies, with the Dead Sea Scrolls (discovered 1947–1956) revealing textual variants predating the Masoretic standardization. The Hebrew Bible is not primarily a historical record; while containing historical memories, its texts blend historiography with theology, legend, and didactic narrative shaped by religious concerns rather than modern empirical standards. It is not fundamentally a Christian scripture; this appropriation constitutes a specific theological reading foreign to its composition and primary interpretive tradition in Judaism.

How to Begin

Those new to the Hebrew Bible should begin with a study Bible providing historical context, translation notes, and commentary. The Jewish Study Bible (Oxford) offers the NJPS translation with Jewish interpretive essays. Robert Alter’s translations prioritize literary artistry in English. Starting with narrative books—Genesis, Exodus, Samuel—provides accessible entry before engaging legal codes or prophetic oracles. Learning basic biblical Hebrew through resources like Duolingo’s course or Weingreen’s Practical Grammar for Classical Hebrew enables direct textual access. Joining a synagogue Torah study group offers communal learning within living tradition. Exploring archaeological context through resources from the Biblical Archaeology Society grounds textual study in material culture. Approaching with scholarly humility, cultural sensitivity, and awareness that these are living scriptures within Judaism remains essential for respectful engagement.

Related terms

torah studymidrashkabbalahjewish mysticismsacred textslectio divina
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