You are on page 1of 1

Toribio, Joyce Marie F.

BS Psychology 2B

The Old Testament

The Old Testament is the first section of the Bible, covering the creation of Earth through
Noah and the flood, Moses, and more, finishing with the Jews being expelled to Babylon. Old
Testament, the Hebrew Bible is interpreted among the various branches of Christianity.
In Judaism the Hebrew Bible is not only the primary text of instruction for a moral life but also
the historical record of God’s promise, first articulated in his covenant with Abraham, to
consider the Jews his chosen people. Christians, on the other hand, view it as the prophecy of the
advent of Jesus Christ as the Messiah, the redeemer of humanity, in fulfillment of that promise.
Thus, Christian tradition employs the Hebrew Scriptures to legitimize the gospel of Jesus in
the New Testament as the natural extension of the Abrahamic covenant. The Old Testament, a
name coined by Melito of Sardis in the 2nd century CE, is longer than the Hebrew Bible, in part
because Christian editors divided particular works into two sections but also because different
Christian groups consider as canonical some texts not found in the Hebrew Bible. For example,
although the Hebrew canon consists of 24 books, the Old Testament of Roman
Catholics comprises 46 books and that of most Protestant churches has 39. 

You might also like