At The Beginning
At The Beginning
The Pentateuch has always been an essential part of Holy Scripture, recognized as such by Jews and Christians alike. For the Jews, whose name for it is “the Torah,” it holds the first and most authoritative place in their Scriptures, being traditionally regarded as the work of Moses. As the only person who spoke with God face to face (Exod. 33:11; Deut. 34:10), Moses was God’s most authoritative spokesman, communicating the will of God to his people. For Christians also the Pentateuch is, together with the rest of the Old Testament, an essential part of the Holy Scriptures. In the Gospels, Jesus is represented as quoting or alluding to the authoritative teaching of “Moses” (i.e., the Pentateuch) more frequently than to any other Old Testament book; and references to it by the other New Testament writers are even more numerous.
The Pentateuch has always been an essential part of Holy Scripture, recognized as such by Jews and Christians alike. For the Jews, whose name for it is “the Torah,” it holds the first and most authoritative place in their Scriptures, being traditionally regarded as the work of Moses. As the only person who spoke with God face to face (Exod. 33:11; Deut. 34:10), Moses was God’s most authoritative spokesman, communicating the will of God to his people. For Christians also the Pentateuch is, together with the rest of the Old Testament, an essential part of the Holy Scriptures. In the Gospels, Jesus is represented as quoting or alluding to the authoritative teaching of “Moses” (i.e., the Pentateuch) more frequently than to any other Old Testament book; and references to it by the other New Testament writers are even more numerous.