Assumption of Moses

E260142

The Assumption of Moses is a lost or fragmentarily preserved Jewish apocryphal work, traditionally attributed to Moses, that narrates prophetic history and his final instructions and has influenced early Christian writings.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Assumption of Moses canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Jewish apocryphal work
Second Temple period literature
pseudepigraphal text
associatedFigure Joshua
Taxo (a righteous figure in the narrative)
attributedAuthor Moses
authorshipStatus pseudonymous
canonicalStatus non-canonical in Judaism
non-canonical in mainstream Christianity
circulation likely circulated among Jewish apocalyptic groups
contentFocus final instructions of Moses to Joshua
prediction of future events in Israel’s history
prophetic review of Israelite history
dateOfComposition 1st century CE (approximate, debated)
late 1st century BCE to early 1st century CE (range, debated)
eschatologyType Jewish apocalyptic eschatology
extantForm fragmentarily preserved
partially lost
extantLanguage Latin
genre apocalypse
testament
historicalScope from Moses to the end-time
includesTheme covenant faithfulness
divine judgment
eschatological hope
persecution of the righteous
influenceOn New Testament epistle of Jude (probable)
early Christian literature
language originally composed in Hebrew or Aramaic (disputed)
literaryForm farewell discourse
prophetic oracle
mainCharacter Moses
manuscriptDate 6th century CE (approximate for the Latin manuscript)
manuscriptWitness single incomplete Latin manuscript
mentionedIn lists of Old Testament pseudepigrapha
narrativePerspective first person speech of Moses
placeOfOrigin Palestine
surface form: Palestine (probable)
relatedWork Jubilees
surface form: Testament of Moses
religiousTradition Christianity
Judaism
scholarlyClassification Genesis Apocryphon
surface form: Old Testament pseudepigrapha
scholarlyDebate whether the extant Latin text is the Testament of Moses or the Assumption of Moses
status partly lost Jewish pseudepigrapha
studiedInField Second Temple Judaism
apocryphal literature
biblical studies
textualCondition corrupt and incomplete

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Epistle of Jude containsAllusionTo Assumption of Moses