The Catholic canon is slightly different from the Protestant. And, there are numerous translations.
No. No more than Islam recognises the bible. Nor do they believe Allah and the God of Christianity are the same
Bible is the Holy Bible book of Christianitycollections of sacred scripture related to Judaism and Christianity. Bible usually made up of 66 books combining the sacred Scriptures of both Judaism ("the Old Testament ") and Christianity (" the New Testament").The Bible is the best selling book in history with more than 6 billion copies published.
Christianity's Bible contains both the OT and NT books, though varying sects may have more books/paragraphs than others.
No, you can not sue a Juvenille Detention Facility for not providing a Muslim bible. America was founded and built on the religion of Christianity, and our foundational principles as a nation thrive because of the Holy Bible of Jesus Christ.
The Holy Bible is the guide to Christians. Another View: The above answer is obviously inadequate. The "Holy Bible" says nothing about a trinitarian deity, nothing about Chalcedonian Christology (defined in related link below). There is nothing in the "Holy Bible" about Jesus or the Holy Ghost being "of one substance with the Father" or "true God of true God". The Christianity that is believed in today all over the world was much more influenced by the writings of early Church fathers, expecially Augustine and his ilk, and by the prejudices of Constantine and fouth century politics, than it was by the "Holy Bible". Anyone who fails to take this into consideration needs a refresher course in the history of western civilization.
maybe luke from bible
More than 300 times; the word sword appears in the Holy Bible
The Bible uses the word holy more than 600 times in reference to God and other things or beings. The word holy means "set apart".
her name is Lilith and she is mentioned in the bible more than once but only named once in Isaiah ch.34:14
A:The Old Testament of the Bible consists of the Jewish scriptures and is therefore significant to Judaism, but the New Testament is not. The Islamic holy book, the Koran (or Qur'an) parallels the Bible and Islam accepts much of the material in the Bible, although without the divinity of Jesus. Other religions do not regard the Bible as significant.
for being stupid
Jerusalem is a holy city for the Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. To other faiths it is not a holy place.