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The New Testament refers to the threefold division of
the Hebrew Scriptures: the law, the prophets, and the writings. Luke 24:44
refers to the "law of Moses" (Pentateuch), the "prophets" which include certain
historical books in addition to the books now called "prophets," and the psalms
(the "writings" designated by its most prominent collection). The Hebrew Bible
probably was canonized in these three stages: the law canonized before the
Exile, the prophets by the time of the Syrian persecution of the Jews, and the
writings shortly after AD 70 (the fall of Jerusalem). About that time, early
Christian writings began being accepted by Christians as "scripture." These
events, taken together, may have caused the Jews to close their "canon." They
listed their own recognized Scriptures and also excluded both Christian and
Jewish writings considered by them to be "apocryphal." In this canon the
thirty-nine books found in the Old Testament of today's Christian Bibles were
grouped together as twenty-two books, equaling the number of letters in the
Hebrew alphabet. This canon of Jewish scripture is attested to by Philo,
Josephus, the New Testament (Luke 11:51, Luke 24:44), and the Talmud.[26]
The New Testament writers assumed the inspiration of the Old Testament, probably
earliest stated in 2 Timothy 3:16 which may be rendered "All Scripture is
inspired of God" or "Every God-inspired Scripture is profitable for teaching."
Both translations consider inspiration as a fact.[26].
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