It does not say "opinion" but it say about judging.
Matthew 7:1, Judge not, that ye be not judged.
Luke 6:37, Judge not, and ye shall not be judged.
Romans 2:1,Therefore thou art inexcusable, O man, whosoever thou art that judgest: for wherein thou judgest another, thou condemnest thyself; for thou that judgest doest the same things.
Romans 14:10, But why dost thou judge thy brother? or why dost thou set at nought thy brother? for we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ.
James 4:12, Who art thou that judgest another?
AnswerThe Egyptian writings never mentioned the Hebrew scriptures.
The Holy Bible is full of inspirational scriptures that can be given to a person to encourage and strengthen then in a difficult time. There are many reasons to read the scriptures.
The word Bible is not found in any sequence of the small font, nor in the sequence of the caps. And there are many mentions of the Holy Word, and the Holy Scriptures. Scriptures is used 21 times in the New Testament. The word is used thousands of times. The word "Bible" is not in the Bible. The word "Bible" was not being used yet at the time the Bible was being written. The word "scripture" or "scriptures" was used instead.
Roman Catholic AnswerYou are operating with a mistaken assumption. The Catholic Church wrote the Bible, the Catholic Church decided which books were canonical (included in the Bible), and the Catholic Church has conserved the Bible through the centuries. The only ones who changed any Scriptures in the Bible are the protestants, who, after fifteen centuries of a Bible preserved by the Catholic Church came along and threw books out of the Bible, and changed the meanings of books they would not throw out.
One of my favorites, which shows the heart of God, is found in Isaiah 58 (get a bible or look it up on line and read what the Scriptures tell us).
Cf. Genesis 1:28-29, 2:15, 9:1.
You have to read it and understand it, if you find any problem, read the two above verses and then the two following verses, you should get the meaning.
These can't be found in the Bible because "the boondock saints family prayer" was not written by any of the writers of the Scriptures. It can be roughly translated from the book of Ezekiel verse 25:17
The Word, the Word of God, Sword of the Spirit. Those are a few that came to mind. Another point of view is, The Scriptures, or Scriptures. Other names such as The Gospel, and Testaments would also apply, depending on the nature of the question.
Jehovah's Witnesses are use many different Bible translations, since comparing various translations often gets you a better feeling for the original Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic. The New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures, published by the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York contains contains all 66 canonical books of the Bible.
We were just in a hotel room where I actually read the Gideon Bible in the drawer. I noticed that it was a King James Version. Because of the history of strained politics between the Vatican and England, it's safe to say that the King James Version is not a Catholic Bible. Regardless, I'm sure the Gideons would not object if a Catholic were to read their Bible.
The Hebrew Bible is another name for what Christians often call the "Old Testament." Jews do not tend to call their bible the "Old Testament", since this name implies that their bible is "old" or that it was replaced by the New Testament. Jewish people do respect the Christian scriptures but do not regard the New Testament as sacred to Judaism, so a Bible for Jews would only contains the Old Testament. Since they do not have any other Testaments, many Jews call their scriptures the Hebrew Bible or the Tanakh (the Hebrew abbreviation for these scriptures).As for the King James Bible, it is a popular Christian translation, from the Protestant tradition-- it contains both the Old Testament and the New Testament. You will note that the King James translation of the Old Testament puts the books in a different order from how the Hebrew Bible has them, and some older versions of King James translate certain verses somewhat differently, in an effort to "prove" that Jesus was predicted in the Hebrew scriptures (Jews do not believe he was). But in general, the main difference is the King James Bible contains both the Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament, while a Hebrew Bible contains the approved Jewish scriptures only, usually translated from the Hebrew by the Jewish Publication Society or another authorized Jewish organization.