Meowzltov
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This is a pretty big topic. We can brush over it in this one post, or go into as much detail a you wish.I'm not against Israel. I am careful, it's not as though it isn't what brought about (I think you're right about Talmud)
Are the two similar? I might not know the Torah, but I can easily. I do assume they are very similar.
The Torah (called the Pentateuch by Christians), is the first five books of the Bible, or the "Books of Law."
The book of Genesis records the creation stories and the legends and histories prior to the Exodus. It includes the history of Abraham with whom God made a covenant. This covenant was that he would be the father of many nations, and that his covenantal people would dwell in the Land that God had given him. This was an unconditional covenant, entirely on God's part, because he loved Abraham. The covenant descends from Abraham to Isaac, and from Isaac to Jacob/Israel, and from Jacob/Israel to his twelve sons (who later become the tribes of Israel.
The book of Exodus records God leading the children of Israel out of slavery in Egypt and into freedom in the wilderness. It records the first observance of the Sabbath. It is one of the two books to record the ten commandments. It gives many laws for the newbies.
Leviticus records most of the laws, especially the sexual laws and the laws regarding sacrifices. The name Leviticus comes from the tribe of Levites, which were in charge of the religious observances.
The book of Numbers gets its name because it includes a census of the tribes.
Deuteronomy is a retelling of most of the laws (just in case you didn't get 'em the first time around) including the ten commandments.
We can talk more about the Torah if you have questions.
Now for the Talmud...
The laws HAD be interpreted in order to be observed as a community. Your not supposed to work on Sabbath, but what exactly is meant by work? You can't have Jane having her idea of what is work, and Jim having a completely different idea what is work. It doesn't work as a community. Moses gave authority to seventy elders (that's what the sanhedron is). Sometimes these elders are called Judges (as in the book of Judges) because they sat in judgement over legal and civil matters. Levites were also sought out for teaching of the law, especially the Kohanim (priests). In Deuteronomy 17:8-13 God grants AUTHORITY to the Levites and Judges to interpret the law -- God said if you disobeyed you were to be killed, so that's LOTS of authority. So for example they ruled that "work" was any of the 39 labors done to form the Tabernacle, since God commanded work on the Tabernacle to cease on the Sabbath. Carrying (outside the home) was one of the labors used for the Tabernacle, so it became forbidden on Sabbath--that's why that guy was put to death for picking up sticks on the Sabbath. (Healing is not one of the 39 labors forbidden.
Each time a question of law like this came up, it was brought before the Judges (Sanhedrin) and ruled on. Over time, these rulings accumulated, similar to the way that case law works in our own legal system. Their sum total is called
Oral Torah.
After the destruction of the temple, and the expulsion of the Jews from Jerusalem, Jews dispersed far and wide all over the world. This is called the diaspora. The Sanhedrin was worried that the Oral Torah would become lost in all the confusion and dispersion. Two attempts were made to record it all. One is the Jerusalem Talmud. The other is the Babylonian Talmud (this is the one most often used, and is usually just referred to as the Talmud).
The Talmud is a very difficult book to read, because it records the very conversations of the Rabbis as they discuss pro and con various possible interpretations of law before the final understanding is reached. IOW, if you don't know what you are doing, you could quote a Rabbi in the Talmud who is voicing an interpretation which was actually rejected and not know that's what you were doing. One should never EVER read the Talmud unless it is with someone who is already learned in Talmud. It takes years and years and years of proper study of the Talmud before one an expert. Studying Talmud online is a very, very wrongheaded idea.
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