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Brother Rabbit I Have Two Biblical Sources outside of the Greek Septuagint (Modern Hebrew Bible) translit....

Brother Rabbit I Have Two Biblical Sources outside of the Greek Septuagint (Modern Hebrew Bible) translit....

Yaiqab Saint · Sunday, October 12th 2014 at 11:12AM · 713 views
Since you have poised a question what other Biblical sources do I have outside of the modern Hebrew text or the Greek Septuagint text.

Well I have three biblical sources and will reveal at least two in the blog text.

Most of the Old Testament (Torah) scriptures were written in Paleo-Hebrew, or closely related derivative (Samaritan).
Generally the Samaritan text is an offshoot of ancient Phoenician script the precursor of pictograph Ancient Hebrew ,Paleo-Hebrew represents the writings of King David, Solomon, the script of Moses (approximately1400 BCE).

Modern Hebrew (Babylonian), on the other hand, is not quite so ancient . Israelites acquired this new alphabet from Assyria (PERSIA), somewhere around the 6th-7th century B.C.

This was the same general time period as Israel's exile to Babylon... many centuries after most of the Old Testament was written.

Initially, the Old Testament Scriptures were exclusively written in Paleo-Hebrew.

Then, after borrowing the new alphabet from the Assyrians, the Hebrews began transliterating large portions of Scripture into the newer version.

Now here are the texts in my possession to check the validity of the King James 1611 version which I use because the expert panel of academics were well versed in Chaldee language.

The origins of our Patriarch Abraham from Ur, Iraq.

A. Samaritan Pentateuch

B. The Messianic Aleph Tav Scriptures Paelo-Hebrew Study Bible Edition


Let's get down to some chronological history dates of the transliteration from the Paleo- Hebrew text to other forms:

A. Greek Septuagint written 250 BCE

B. Vorlage Text 400 BCE which was a ancient paleo-hebrew text which lead to the Greek Septuagint/ Hebrew Bible used today.

The Samaritan Pentateuch uses the Samaritan alphabet, which is closely related to Paleo-Hebrew. This text looks similar to what Moses saw before 1100 BCE.

Unlike the newer Assyrian/Babylonian alphabet copies around the time of the Messiah (Jesus/Yahawahshi), the majority of copies of the old testament had either been transliterated into modern Hebrew, or translated into Greek (in the Septuagint).

However the Samaritan Pentateuch which continues to be written in the ancient paleo-hebrew form, even to this modern day (today).

The same goes for the other text that I reference (The Messianic Aleph Tav Scriptures Paelo-Hebrew Study Bible).

So for further edification I expect that you will refrain from asking me this question again on this forum.

Have a good day!

About the Author

Yaiqab Saint Nassau County- Long Island (Strong Isl ), NY

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Comments (4)

Yaiqab Saint Sunday, October 12th 2014 at 1:06PM

@ "D"

Your previous reference to the Codex "Game Over" by Shakaa Ahmose is non-sense to me !

I go back to the Semitic language writing of Chaldee before Abraham.

Also when he/you reference the Bible was plagerized by Egypt religious texts. Hebrews living in Egypt had Torah scriptures written and they also had Akkadian writings of Biblical characters before Abraham.

Which was the precursor of the Ancient Sumer/Eridu languages.

Please check the following references:


Founded
Approximately 54th century BC

Abandoned
Approximately 6th century BC

Eridu (Cuneiform: NUN.KI �� ��; Sumerian: eriduki; Akkadian: irîtu) is an ancient Sumerian city in what is now Tell Abu Shahrain, Dhi Qar Governorate, Iraq. Eridu was long considered the earliest city in southern Mesopotamia, and is still today argued to be the oldest city in the world.[1] Located 12 km southwest of Ur, Eridu was the southernmost of a conglomeration of Sumerian cities that grew about temples, almost in sight of one another. In Sumerian mythology, Eridu was originally the home of Enki, later known by the Akkadians as Ea, who was considered to have founded the city. His temple was called E-Abzu, as Enki was believed to live in Abzu, an aquifer from which all life was believed to stem.



Abraham lived among Hebrew Egyptians when he traveled to Egypt and that has been recorded in Egyptian history/papyrus.

But you believe that Abraham never existed!

Akkadians lived in Egypt before Abraham..... they come from the same land Iraq! The Akkadian are Hebrews!

So next time before you speak do your homework because Shakka Ahmose has to prepare in advance and state that material in the "Book of The Dead" is older than the Codex Sinaiticus or Greek Septuagint versions of the Bible is copied.

Check the prophesies compared to the Egyptian text.

The Black Kemet followers are perhaps the most ignorant lazy academic researchers I have seen in my life.

Steve Williams Sunday, October 12th 2014 at 1:21PM

Even before the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, however, theories about the Biblical text in the Second Temple period abounded. These theories drew inspiration from two texts whose roots lie in the same period: the Septuagint and the Samaritan version of the Bible. The Septuagint Vorlage (the presumed underlying Hebrew text) differs from the Masoretic Text [the received Hebrew text, the Authorized Text, the Jewish Bible, abbreviated MT] in many aspects, several of them of great significance. We cannot determine the exact Vorlage of the Septuagint, but it appears to have contained thousands of differences from the received text, some minor (conjunctive vav, prepositions, etc.) and some quite significant, including words, sentences, and even whole sections (an outstanding example is The Book of Jeremiah, which in the Septuagint is almost one eighth shorter than in the Masoretic Text).

http://cs.anu.edu.au/~bdm/dilugim/CohenArt...

Yaiqab Saint Sunday, October 12th 2014 at 1:34PM

Masoretic text had over 6000 translation errors.

Agreed and they made some false omissions/interpretations from the ancient Hebrew paleo-hebrew text.

The Masoretic sect and their theories are dead to a true researcher!

Steve Williams Sunday, October 12th 2014 at 2:18PM

How have they reconstructed the paleo-hebrew text? Besides the two sources you mention and the dead sea scrolls I guess?

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