In my post yesterday on The Big Book of Church Jokes I made
a typographical error, even though I check every post for spelling and grammar
before I release it. It is very
easy to misspell a word, double your “ands” or your “thes, ” leave out “of,” or
to say something which seems
logical when written but which really makes no sense. In yesterday’s post, I spelled “silly” as “sily.” I apparently totally missed the red
underlining provided by my word processor’s Spell Checker program.
Knowing how easy it is to make a mistake when one writes, it
makes it even more amazing to know that the first five books of the Bible (the
Torah) have been preserved by the Jews at the LETTER level for thousands of
years.
Each synagogue which can afford one owns as Sefer Torah, a
handwritten copy of the books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and
Deuteronomy. This is in the form
of a scroll which is used in formal religious ceremonies. When not in use, the scroll is stored
in the holiest spot in the synagogue.
Each of the scrolls is produced under extremely restrictive
conditions, on a particular type of parchment using a particular type of quill
pen by one specially trained rabbi.
The entire scroll must be produced by that one sofer (scribe)..
The number of letters must total 304,805 with each letter in
its proper position, each one perfectly formed, sized, and placed. The ink of a random imperfect letter
may be scraped off the parchment and replaced by a perfect one. If any error of any sort involves the
name of God, that page must be cut from the scroll and a new perfect page must
be sewn into its place. The
removed page is buried with respect.
A Sefer Torah can take as long as a year and one half to
produce and cost as much as $10,000.
Parchment is a perishable material; still, the oldest known surviving are over 700 years old.
The Jews have done us a great service by their historical
insistence on preserving the purity of the scriptures.
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