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  1. Sep 5, 2023 · Below, you will find a complete list of Bible authorship for who is traditionally named for writing each book of the Bible with evidence supporting the attribution. The purpose is to give you historical context and an accurate understanding of who wrote the books of the Bible that share God’s Word.

    • Pentateuch
    • The Books of History
    • The Books Poetry
    • Major Prophets
    • Minor Prophets

    These are the books of the Law. These are also called the Books of Moses. This includes the first five books: Genesis,written by Moses Exodus,written by Moses Leviticus,written by Moses Numbers,written by Moses Deuteronomy,written by Moses

    The Books of history are so named because they contain historical records and these books include: Joshua, written by Joshua(except the parts relating to his death) Judges,written by Samuel, Nathan, Gad Ruth,written by Samuel, Nathan, Gad 1 Samuel,written by Samuel, Nathan, Gad 2 Samuel,written by Samuel, Nathan, Gad 1 Kings,written by Jeremiah 2 K...

    Also called the books of Writings include the following books: Job,written by Job: Moses may have compiled the book based on Job’s records Psalms, written by David, and several others including Asaph, Ezra, the sons of Korah, Heman, Ethan, Moses and a host of unnamed authors Proverbs,written by Solomon: Agur and Lemuel are specifically named as the...

    The Major Prophets are so named because their books are longer, not because they are more important. Isaiah,written by Isaiah Jeremiah,written by Jeremiah Lamentations,written by Jeremiah Ezekiel,written by Ezekiel Daniel,written by Daniel

    The Minor Prophets are so named because they are shorter not because they are less important. Hosea,written by Hosea Joel,written by Joel Amos,written by Amos Obadiah,written by Obadiah Jonah,written by Jonah Micah,written by Micah Nahum,written by Nahum Habakkuk,written by Habakkuk Zephaniah,written by Zephaniah Haggai,written by Haggai Zechariah,...

  2. With many books of the Bible, we can have a reasonably good idea who wrote them, through a combination of internal evidence (what the writings say themselves), external evidence (what other sources tell us), and tradition (what people have historically believed and taught down the centuries).

  3. Nov 24, 2018 · “About 40 people wrote the Bible.” The individual books were written by many authors over many years in many places to many different people groups. Ultimately, above the human authors, the Bible was written by God. Second Timothy 3:16 tells us that the Bible was “breathed out” by God.

    • Moses (Genesis | Exodus | Leviticus | Numbers | Deuteronomy | Psalms) Moses is the prophet who leads Israel from slavery in Egypt to the edge of the promised land.
    • Ezra (1 & 2 Chronicles | Ezra) Ezra is born long, long after Moses. But like the ancient prophet, Ezra leads a group of Israelites from exile in another nation back to the promised land.
    • Nehemiah (Nehemiah) Nehemiah is a cupbearer to the king of Persia when he gets some disturbing news: his countrymen back in Jerusalem are in dire straits, and the city is in shambles (Neh 1:3).
    • David (Psalms) You’ve all heard of this guy. He’s the shepherd boy who killed Goliath the giant. He’s the war-hero king who delivered Israel from her enemies and established Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
  4. Sep 14, 2015 · Since most books in the Bible were written anonymously (not uncommon in Biblical days), much of what we know for certain about the authorship comes from logical deduction. What follows is the opinion of the majority of contemporary scholars along with the traditional views of authorship (both Jewish and Christian).

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  6. Mar 30, 2022 · Here are the books of the Bible along with the name of who is most assumed by biblical scholars to be the author, along with the approximate date of authorship: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy = Moses - 1400 B.C. Joshua = Joshua - 1350 B.C.

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