A Tannaitic Book List

The sages taught: The order of the [books of the] Prophets [when they are attached together is as follows]: Joshua and Judges, Samuel and Kings, Jeremiah and Ezekiel, [and] Isaiah and the Twelve [Prophets. The Gemara asks:] Consider: Hosea preceded [some of the other prophets whose books are included in the Bible], as it is written: The Lord spoke first to Hosea (Hosea 1:2). [At first glance this verse is difficult:] But did God speak first with Hosea, [and not with any other prophet before him]? Weren’t there many prophets between Moses and Hosea? And R. Yoḥanan says: He was the first of four prophets who prophesied in that period, and they were: Hosea and Isaiah, Amos and Micah. [Accordingly, Hosea preceded those three prophets;] and [the book of] Hosea [as well] should precede [the books of those prophets].

[The Gemara answers:] Since his prophecy is written together with [those of] Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi [in one book of the Twelve Prophets], and Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi were the last of the prophets, he is counted with them. [The Gemara inquires:] But let [the book of Hosea] be written separately and let it precede [the others. The Gemara answers: Were it written separately,] since it is small it would be lost.

[The Gemara further asks:] Consider: Isaiah preceded Jeremiah and Ezekiel; let [the book of] Isaiah precede [the books of those other prophets. The Gemara answers:] Since [the book of] Kings ends with the destruction [of the Temple], and [the book of] Jeremiah [deals] entirely with [prophecies of] the destruction, and [the book of] Ezekiel begins with the destruction [of the Temple] but ends with consolation [and the rebuilding of the Temple], and Isaiah [deals] entirely with consolation, [as most of his prophecies refer to the redemption,] we juxtapose destruction to destruction and consolation to consolation. [This accounts for the order: Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Isaiah.]

[The baraita continues:] The order of the Writings is: Ruth and the book of Psalms, and Job and Proverbs; Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs, and Lamentations; Daniel and the scroll of Esther; and Ezra and Chronicles. [The Gemara asks:] And according to the one who says that Job lived in the time of Moses, let [the book of] Job precede [the others. The Gemara answers:] We do not begin with suffering, [i.e., it is inappropriate to start the Writings with a book that deals so extensively with suffering. The Gemara asks: But the book of] Ruth, [with which the Writings opens,] is also [about] suffering, [since it describes the tragedies that befell the family of Elimelech. The Gemara answers: This is] suffering which has a future [of hope and redemption]. As R. Yoḥanan says: Why was she named Ruth, [spelled resh, vav, tav? Because there] descended from her David, who sated [a word with the root resh, vav, heh] the Holy One with songs and praises.

Translation adapted from the Noé Edition of the Koren Talmud Bavli.

Notes

Words in brackets appear in the original translation.

Credits

From Koren Talmud Bavli, Noé Edition, trans. Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz (Jerusalem: Koren Publishers Jerusalem, 2019). Accessed via the William Davidson digital edition, sefaria.org. Adapted with permission of Koren Publishers Ltd.

Published in: The Posen Library of Jewish Culture and Civilization, vol. 2: Emerging Judaism.

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