Tobit
The Book of Tobit is an apocryphal story of two families living in Assyrian exile during the 8th century BC, likely composed between the era 250-150 before Christ in Hebrew or Aramaic. It tells of a righteous man named Tobit (Tobi), his son Tobiyah, and a woman named Sarah, whom Tobiyah ultimately marries, focusing on the characters’ prayer, good deeds, and the miraculous divine intervention they experience.
Midrash Bereishit Rabbah includes a truncated Aramaic version of Tobit, and one medieval manuscript suggests that at least in some medieval communities, the work was publicly read on the holiday of Shavuot.
Category Reference Guide
Title/Thesis - The name of the book in American English
Synthesis 2nd Temple - The name of the book in order of its presentation other than the Apostles, ranging from 2nd temple Judaism up to the 1st century
Antithesis - The name of the book in another language
Synthesis Apostolic - The identity of the book in order of its presentation according to Tradition in the church after the 3rd century
Synthesis Amoraim - The name of the book in order of its presentation other than the Apostles, ranging from Tannaim up to the 5th century
Continent Origin - Continent from where the Text Type Source comes from
Southern Worldview - Catalog strategy for storing the scrolls include the interpretation. South means Africa or Egypt (Alexandrian) such as LXX. South of Palestine.
Northern Worldview - Catalog strategy for storing the scrolls include the interpretation. North means Asia or Persia (Babylonian) such as Masoretic. North of Palestine.



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Link to some reference to Tobit