Sono_gioiosa wrote:Lastly, has someone made a book or interpret the Scripture from Hebrew, Greek, Aramaic language? And show here so everyone can read?
The image in the previous post seems early Aramaic. I guess only historians can translate the glyphs to modern Aramaic, which uses the same letters of Hebrew.
There are a few interlinear bibles, where one can read word by word the original against English. If one does not mind the translation word by word, it can be done line by line with any bible in any language. There are many portals online where you can place bibles side by side. The Leningrad Codex has also all the vowel points and is the standard masoretic text of the bible.
Many tried to do a sort of navigable bible, where they key and explain every main word in the bible from the original Hebrew (you click on the word and get the possible translations and compared meanings). An example is Strong's bible/lexicon.
Among the most correct translations of the Bible I consider King James', and to a lesser extent Tyndale. Nowadays, we have some new Jewish translations, which are quite accurate and different from the Bibles we are used to. However... they respect a tradition that is hard to understand by a non-Jew and are not always so literal as they should.
And just taking Jewish sources, there are many commentaries (Hebrew only) that take into account different interpretations. There is the simple interpretation, whose main commentator is certainly Rashi. He goes for the absolute literal meaning of the sentence, excluding any possible reference, connection, or implied meaning. Then you have the allegorical interpretation, interpretation by similitude with other passages, and secret interpretation. Those interpretations (their actual names) go by the acronym of Pardes, which means "orchard", or "paradise". Therefore, the many levels of interpretation of the Bible are said to open the gates of the lost Eden, and all are needed to get back in.
"The real opposite of love is not hate, but indifference" (Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz)