Talmud su Osea 8:12
אכתוב־[אֶ֨כְתָּב־] ל֔וֹ רבו [רֻבֵּ֖י] תּֽוֹרָתִ֑י כְּמוֹ־זָ֖ר נֶחְשָֽׁבוּ׃
Sebbene io scriva per lui mai tante cose della Mia Legge, sono considerate straniere'S.
Jerusalem Talmud Peah
Rebbi Zeïra in the name of Rebbi Eleazar: (Hos. 8:12) “I100Words of God. wrote down for him most of My teaching.”101In the Babli (Giṭṭin 60b), this is the definite statement of R. Eleazar. The later statement of R. Samuel bar Naḥman is attributed in the Babli to R. Joḥanan, and R. Zeïra follows the latter’s argument. But was most of the Torah written down? Rather, more things are derived from what is written than what is (only) oral tradition. Is that so? But so it is: Things derived from what is transmitted orally are preferred over those written.
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Jerusalem Talmud Peah
Rebbi Judah ben Pazi says: “I wrote down for him most of My teaching,” these are the admonitions102Lev. 26:14–46, Deut. 28:15–69.. Nevertheless, is it not that (Hos. 8:12) “they were considered foreign”.
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