Torah Portions Study Guides: Comparing the Paleo Hebrew with the Greek LXX, Targum, & KJV

Books | New | Paleo Hebrew | Pamela Glasgow

FINALLY, the Torah Portions Study Guide is complete! Here at TUC: The Unexpected Cosmology, we have been working to introduce the Paleo-Hebrew to a modern 21st century audience. The Paleo in case you are not aware isn’t simply the original Hebrew. No, it is the Hebrew. The Paleo is the language of Enoch, of Shem, of Moses, of David, and the Prophets. Unfortunately, it is not the language found in our Bibles today. Today, we are given a substitute with the Babylonian script. But alas, the books once sealed are being opened. Does this not excite you? 

We have been attempting to make the Paleo known in a number of ways, through book publications and online studies. We want to see each and every one of you strengthened spiritually by the power of the revealed language. This is where the Torah Portions Study Guide comes in. It’s a line-for-line comparison of the KJV, Paleo-Hebrew, Jonathan Targum, and the Septuagint. That would be the Hebrew Masoretic, Paleo-Hebrew, Aramaic, and the Greek LXX, in case you’re wondering. Nobody that we know of thought to make one, and of course, we’ve been wanting a practical resource guide such as this for many years now. We are therefore thrilled to finally have all five available. The Torah Portions Study Guide not only includes all four language translations, divided up by that week’s prescribed reading, but also the additional Prophets and Gospel portions which are intended to accompany them. These are designed for your own personal research but also for families and small group or in-home Sabbath gatherings.

There are 52 weeks in a year, indicating just as many Torah portions. The Torah of course consists of five books, Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. And so, each of these titles are divided up in so much that it takes one year to read through all the books of Moshe. Also, each cycle begins with the completion of the fall feasts, after Sukkot. In this way, thousands upon thousands of Bible believers all across the world are studying the same passages at the same time.