law of Moses
0 sources
law of Moses
Summary
law of Moses is a religious concept[1]. It draws 1,202 Wikipedia views per month (religious_concept category, ranking #53 of 471).[2]
Key Facts
- law of Moses's instance of is recorded as religious concept[3].
- law of Moses's instance of is recorded as code of law[4].
- Moses is named after law of Moses[5].
- law of Moses is part of Mosaic covenant[6].
- law of Moses is part of Hebrew Bible[7].
- law of Moses is part of New Testament[8].
- law of Moses's Commons category is recorded as Law of Moses[9].
- law of Moses comprises Ten Commandments[10].
- law of Moses comprises kashrut[11].
- law of Moses comprises Niddah[12].
- law of Moses's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Law of Moses[13].
- law of Moses's described by source is recorded as Exodus[14].
- law of Moses's described by source is recorded as Leviticus[15].
- law of Moses's described by source is recorded as Book of Numbers[16].
- law of Moses's described by source is recorded as Deuteronomy[17].
- law of Moses's Stack Exchange tag is recorded as https://christianity.stackexchange.com/tags/mosaic-law[18].
- law of Moses's different from is recorded as Code of Ur-Nammu[19].
- law of Moses's different from is recorded as Code of Hammurabi[20].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded instance of include religious concept[3] and code of law[4].
Origins
Moses is named after law of Moses[5].
Use and Application
Components include Ten Commandments[10], a religious text[21]; kashrut[11], a product certification[22]; and Niddah[12]. Part of include Mosaic covenant[6], a covenant[23]; Hebrew Bible[7], a written work[24]; and New Testament[8], a written work[25], founded in 0100[26], written by various authors[27].
Why It Matters
law of Moses draws 1,202 Wikipedia views per month (religious_concept category, ranking #53 of 471).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 24 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 20 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]