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Old Testament

233 bytes added, 10:56, August 4, 2011
Historical books
Although scholars believe that the Law was not written by the personal hand of Moses, and that the books show evidence of being the result of a number of oral and written traditions and time periods, the Church connects the Law with Moses, the great man of [[God]] to whom "the Lord used to speak ... face to face, as a man speaks to his friend" (Exodus 33:11).
==Historical booksThe Books of History ==The next set second section of books cover the [[Septuagint|LXX Old Testament]] is known as the '''Historical Books'''. This group covers the history of Israel from the settlement in the promised land of Canaan to the first centuries before Christ.  
They include:
*# [[Book of Joshua|Joshua]] (Jesus Navi)*# [[Judges]]*# [[Book of Ruth|Ruth]]*# First and Second Kingdoms## [[I Kingdoms]] (I Samuel)*## [[II Kingdoms]] (II Samuel)*# Third and Fourth Kingdoms## [[III Kingdoms]] (I Kings)*## [[IV Kingdoms]] (II Kings)*# First and Second Chronicles## [[I Paraleipomenon]] (I Chronicles)*## [[II Paraleipomenon]] (II Chronicles)*## [[Book of Nehemiah|Nehemiah]]*## [[I Esdras]]*## [[II Esdras]] (Ezra)*# The Final Books## [[Tobit]] (Tobias)*## [[Judith]]*## [[Book of Esther|Esther]]*## [[I Maccabees]]*## [[II Maccabees]]*## [[III Maccabees]] (English bible) 
In the [[Canon (Bible)|canon]] of the Orthodox Church, which is generally that of the [[Septuagint]], the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, 1 and 2 Samuel are called 1 and 2 Kings, and 1 and 2 Kings are called 3 and 4 Kings. Also, the so-called apocryphal books, listed above (I Esdras, II Esdras, Tobit, Judith, I Maccabees, II Maccabees, III Maccabees, IV Maccabees), are considered by the Orthodox as genuine parts of the Bible. The Old Testament apocrypha is a body of writings considered by the non-Orthodox to be of close association with the Bible, but not actually part of its official canonical contents.
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