The New Testament is the second part of The Bible. Its authors include John, Peter, Paul, James, Luke, Mathew, Mark, and Jude.
The Old Testament authors were Jewish and the New Testament authors Christian, although some of the New Testament authors (Paul, for example) came from a Jewis background.
There are 8 authors, Matthew, Mark, Luke , John, Paul, Peter, James and Jude.
The New Testament was originally written in Greek, in its entirety. Therefore the authors themselves wrote the 'Greek edition', although scholars are not sure in some cases who those authors really were.
there is many stories in the old testament that are written by many authors
AnswerThe New Testament gospel authors are also known as the evangelists.
Latin and potentially Greek in some areas.
Multiple prophets and authors took part in writing the old and new testament of the bible.
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, paul, Peter james, Jude
The two books in the New Testament that begin with the letter "Z" are the Book of Zephaniah and the Book of Zechariah. However, Zephaniah is actually part of the Old Testament, while the relevant book in the New Testament is the Book of Revelation, traditionally attributed to John. Therefore, the only book in the New Testament that starts with "Z" is Zechariah, which is not a New Testament book; thus, there are no books starting with "Z" in the New Testament.
AnswerMalachi 3:6 For I am the LORD, I change not;
Well, all Scripture was ordained/"written" by God, but there were many different authors in the Old and New Testaments. Moses, David, Isaiah and Solomon were some of the authors in the Old Testament, and Paul, John, Peter, Matthew and Luke were some of the ones in the New Testament.
Depending on who is doing the counting, there are between 600 and 3,000 direct quotes, references, allegories to the Old Testament. Jesus Himself, quoted from it about 100 times. The most quoted book of Scripture is Isaiah, often referred to as the 'Little Bible.'The Old Testament is frequently used in the New Testament. Its authors wanted the New Testament to be seen as the fulfilment of the Old Testament and Christianity as the natural successor to Second Temple Judaism.