Ehav4Ever
Well-Known Member
On the Text of the Torah, by Rabbi Gil Student, Torat Emet - Textual Criticism Of The Torah
At the end of his life, Moshe wrote thirteen Torahs - one for each of the twelve tribes and one for the priests to keep in the ark (Devarim Rabbah 9:9; Deut. 31:9, 24-26). The Torah only specifies the priestly scroll, but that might be due to the importance this text would play in history. The priests safeguarded this Torah and brought it to the Temple when it was built. Sefer Tagi (introduction in Torah Shelemah vol. 29 p. 87), an ancient work on the letters of the Torah, tells us that Eli the priest (of 1 Samuel) wrote a book with details of the Torah's script based on another of Moshe's writings. This, too, was kept in the Temple……Thus, Moshe's Torah scroll was kept in the Temple as a reference. Due to the antiquity and historical importance of this scroll, there were probably other copies of it that were kept in the Temple for everyday use. This would minimize the wear-and-tear on the important Torah of Moshe. Whenever a Torah scroll was written, it would be written based on these codices to guaranty the accuracy of its text. This ensured the integrity of the Torah through much of the Temple period