Accuracy of the Bible - TORAH Scrolls - The Five Books of Moses
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Accuracy of the Books of Moses
Why and how the the 5 Books of Moses (Torah in Hebrew and Pentateuch in Greek) have maintained their accuracy over the millenia.
Learn about the process of making Torah scrolls - preserving the accuracy of the Five Books of Moses down through the ages
ACCURACY OF TORAH TEXT
How do we know that the Torah we have today is the same text given on Mount Sinai?
The Torah was originally dictated from God to Moses, letter for letter.
From there, the Midrash (Devarim Rabba 9:4) tells us:
"Before his death, Moses wrote 13 Torah Scrolls. Twelve of these were
distributed to each of the 12 Tribes. The 13th was placed in the Ark of
the Covenant (with the Tablets). If anyone would come and attempt to rewrite
or falsify the Torah, the one in the Ark would 'testify' against him."
(Likewise, if he had access to the scroll in the Ark and tried to falsify
it, the distributed copies would 'testify' against him.)
How were the new scrolls verified?
An authentic "proof text" was always
kept in the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, against which all other scrolls
would be checked. Following the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, the
Sages would periodically perform global checks to weed out any scribal
errors.
* * *
WRITING A TORAH SCROLL
To eliminate any chance of human error, the Talmud enumerates more
than 20 factors mandatory for a Torah scroll to be considered "kosher."
This is the Torah's built-in security system. Should any one of these
factors be lacking, it does not possess the sanctity of a Torah scroll,
and is not to be used for a public Torah reading.
The meticulous process of hand-copying a scroll takes about 2,000 hours
(a full-time job for one year). Throughout the centuries, Jewish scribes
have adhered to the following guidelines:
- A Torah Scroll is disqualified if even a single letter is added.
- A Torah Scroll is disqualified if even a single letter is deleted.
- The scribe must be a learned, pious Jew, who has undergone special
training and certification.
- All materials (parchment, ink, quill) must conform to strict
specifications, and be prepared specifically for the purpose of writing a Torah Scroll.
- The scribe may not write even one letter into a Torah Scroll by heart.
Rather, he must have a second, kosher scroll opened before him at all
times.
- The scribe must pronounce every word out loud before copying it from the
correct text.
- Every letter must have sufficient white space surrounding it. If one
letter touched another in any spot, it invalidates the entire scroll.
- If a single letter was so marred that it cannot be read at all, or
resembles another letter (whether the defect is in the writing, or is due to a hole,
tear or smudge), this invalidates the entire scroll. Each letter must be
sufficiently legible so that even an ordinary schoolchild could
distinguish it from other, similar letters.
- The scribe must put precise space between words, so that one word will
not look like two words, or two words look like one word.
- The scribe must not alter the design of the sections, and must conform
to particular line-lengths and paragraph configurations.
- A Torah Scroll in which any mistake has been found, cannot be used,
and must be fixed within 30 days, or buried.
* * *
SUCCESS OF THE SYSTEM
Maintaining the accuracy of any document as ancient and as large as the
Torah is very challenging even under the best of circumstances.
But consider that throughout history, Jewish communities were subject to
widespread persecutions and exile. Over the last 2,000 years, Jews have
been spread to the four corners of the world, from Yemen to Poland, from
Australia to Alaska.
Other historical factors make the accurate transmission of the Torah all
the more difficult. For example, the destruction of the Temple 1,900 years ago
saw the dissolution of the Sanhedrin, the Jewish central authority which
traditionally would unify the Jewish people in case of any disagreements.
Let's investigate the facts as we have them today. If we collect the
oldest Torah scrolls and compare them, we can see if any garbling exists, and if
so, how much.
How many letters are there in the Torah? 304,805 letters (or approximately
79,000 words).
If you were to guess, how many letters of these 304,805 do you think are
in question? (Most people guess anywhere from 25 to 1,000 letters.)
The fact is, that after all the trials and tribulations, communal
dislocations and persecutions, only the Yemenite Torah scrolls contain any difference
from the rest of world Jewry. For hundreds of years, the Yemenite
community was not part of the global checking system, and a total of nine
letter-differences are found in their scrolls.
These are all spelling differences. In no case do they change the meaning
of the word. For example, how would you spell the word "color?" In
America, it's spelled C-O-L-O-R. But in England, it's spelled with a "u,"
C- O-L-O-U-R.
Such is the nature of the few spelling differences between Torah scrolls
today. The results over thousands of years are remarkable!
* * *
TORAH COMPARED TO OTHER TEXTS
But how impressive is this compared to other similar documents, such as
the Christian Bible? (Both books contain approximately the same number
of words.)
First of all, which would you expect to be more successful in preserving
the accuracy of a text?
The Christian Bible. For several reasons.
First, the Christian Bible is about 1,700 years younger than the Torah.
Second, the Christians haven't gone through nearly as much exile and
dislocation as the Jews. Third, Christianity has always had a central
authority (the Vatican) to ensure the accuracy of their text.
What are the results? The Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, a book
written to prove the validity of the New Testament, says: "A study of 150
Greek [manuscripts] of the Gospel of Luke has revealed more than 30,000
different readings... It is safe to say that there is not one sentence in
the New Testament in which the [manuscript] is wholly uniform."
Other scholars report there are some 200,000 variants in the existing
manuscripts of the New Testament, representing about 400 variant
readings which cause doubt about textual meaning; 50 of these are of
great significance.
The Torah has nine spelling variants -- with absolutely no effect on the
meaning of the words. The Christian Bible has over 200,000 variants and in
400 instances the variants change the meaning of the text.
The point of course is not to denigrate Christianity. Rather, this
comparison demonstrates the remarkable accuracy of the Jewish transmission of
Torah.
* * *
THE TORAH AND THE UNIVERSE
There is a famous story in the Talmud (Eruvin 13a):
When Rabbi Meir came to Rabbi Yishmael to learn Torah, he was asked:
"What is your profession, my son?"
"I am a scribe," was the reply.
He said to me: "My son, be careful with your work, for it is the work of
Heaven. Should you perhaps omit one letter or add one letter -- it could
result that you destroy the entire world..."
Rebbe Meir remarked: "Needless to say, I do not err by omitting or adding
(letters)... but I am even concerned for a fly -- lest it come and alight
upon the right-hand corner of a dalet and erase it, thereby rendering it a
reish."
The famed commentator Rashi (11th century France) offers examples of
how the addition or deletion of a single letter can lead to a blasphemous
or heretical reading of the Torah -- i.e. a mistake that could destroy the
entire world.
Maharsha (16th century Poland) explains there is a danger even if the
error does not affect the meaning of the word. This is because of a
Kabbalistic tradition that the letters of the Torah form the sacred Names
of God written as "black fire upon white fire." These letters were employed
by God in creating the world, and it is through them that He sustains it. The
deletion of even one letter of this sustaining force therefore threatens
the existence of the world.
Carefully guarding the words of the Torah has been a Jewish priority
throughout the centuries.
Based on Aish HaTorah's Discovery Seminar
Ms. Kude is, among many other things, a freelance journalist devoted to spreading truth about the Gospel. With her words she fights many of the lies and distortions of the world and brings some clarity and perspective to its many bewildering events.
Books about the writing and accuracy of the Bible
Torah Scrolls
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Making a Torah Scroll
Dedicating the Torah Scroll
Learn About the Torah and the Bible
- Nachmanides
- Learn about the great Torah scholar Nachmanides - the Ramban and read the famous letter to his son and access resources to learn his unique and incredible insights into the Books of Moses.
- The Chebar - Judeo/ Christian Studies, News & You!
- Study the Bible using Jewish and Christian commentaries and sources. Keep up to date with the latest news from Jerusalem and Israel and the Middle East. Keep abreast of religious issues around the world including Christian persecution and Christianity and Public Policy. Find Christian and Jewish organizations. Everything you need to study the Bible.
- Torah Online
- A one page list of all resources necessary for a complete study of the Torah. You can also learn about the Torah via an online tutorial.
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Reply
- TheChebar TheChebar Dec 30, 2008 @ 8:15 pm
- Yes that is usually the case - either burned or buried I believe[in reply to johna]
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Reply
- johna johna Dec 4, 2008 @ 4:31 pm
- I heard that as manuscripts were getting old, they were burned. That is, after a given amount of copies, the original was burned and replaced with a copy, to avoid errors due to wear-and-tear...
Is this true?
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Reply
- Yitz Yitz Sep 3, 2008 @ 10:59 pm
- There is a website of the Sofer Yitzchok Reisman who claims to have the oldest complete torah scroll in the world dated by carbon 14
http://www.torahscrollworld.com/show.asp?PID=8
Including pictures
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Reply
- JLumbroso JLumbroso Feb 25, 2008 @ 3:33 pm
- Can you provide the source (tractate) for the writing requirements for a Sefer Torah? This was actually a discussion I had with a friend this week and could not remember the details I had read before.
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