No. St. Thomas Aquinas did not translate The Bible. That would be St. Jerome who translated the Bible from the original Greek and Hebrew into Latin.
Thomas Aquinas did not write the bible and has never been given credit for doing so. Perhaps you are thinking about St. Jerome who translated the Bible from Greek and Hebrew into Latin.
Saint Thomas Aquinas (1225 - 1274), a Catholic Dominican priest. Aquinas adopted many of Aristotle's fundamental accounts of knowledge by the human intellect, of the perceptions of place, time, and motion, and importantly, his proof of a prime mover.
No. It's not described as such.
The Holy Bible, the writings of the Church Fathers, & various other writers such as St. Thomas Aquinas.
AnswerJerome translated the Bible from Greek into Latin.
John Wesley did not translate the Bible.
Richard Thomas Aquinas Murphy has written: 'Reflections on the Sunday readings' -- subject(s): Bible, Catholic Church, Church year meditations, English, English Liturgical lessons, Liturgical lessons, English, Prayer-books and devotions 'The Sunday Gospels' -- subject(s): Bible. N.T. Epistles and Gospels, Liturgical, Commentaries 'An introduction to the prophets of Israel' -- subject(s): Bible, Introductions 'The Sunday Epistles' -- subject(s): Bible, English Liturgical lessons, Liturgical lessons, English
He did not translate any passages in the KJV Bible.
No. King James didn't translate any bible. He hired biblical scholars to translate the bible. The KJV wasn't the first English bible version. The Bishops bible, the Geneva bible, among others were translated first.
Imitation Of Christ, by Thomas Kempis, The Secret of the Rosary, by St. Louis de Montford, The Writings of the Church Fathers, The Writings of St. Thomas Aquinas, Mere Christianity, by C.S. Lewis.
'Saint' is found in 24 different books of the Bible. Saint also appears 98 times in the Bible.
The Saint John's Bible was created in 2007.