In the most general terms... by taking it with you when you leave the house; thus making it accessible to you in whateverpublic place you may be going[for personal use... in case someone randomlyinquires of you regarding a Bible-related subject... if you're going to a Bible study, etc.].
In private worship, the whole Bible is used. In public worship, only those parts of the Bible that are politically expedient at the moment are used.
One thought is that the Bible can be taken to most public areas and read and studied. The Bible can be read and studied at home inside or outside. Most certainly in some countries the Bible can be taken into church.
The Bible is allowed in public school in the United States when pupils bring it for personal use. The Bible cannot be used by a teacher or other school official under rulings stating there must be a separation between church and state.
Yes, the Bible is considered to be in the public domain because it is a religious text that is not subject to copyright protection.
The original work is probably in the public domain. Modern translations of the bible, however, are almost certainly protected by copyright.
No; it is not likely to enter the public domain until 2080.
The Bible was first made available to the public in the 15th century, after the invention of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg in 1455. This allowed for mass production of the Bible, making it more accessible to the general population.
Jesus was beaten in public before he was crucified.
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.
No, it is in the public domain.
The Bible versions that are public domain are the following: BBE (Bible in Basic English), KJV (King James Version), WEB (World English Bible), ASV (American Standard Bible of 1901), and the NET Bible.
In one of the oaths of 2008, he used Abraham Lincoln's Bible; because the chief justice read it wrong, the oath was re-taken the next day, but no bible was used in the brief ceremony, which was done just to make sure the oath was administered correctly. In the private oath on January 20, 2012, in the Blue Room of the White House, President Obama used a family bible. Then, the next day, in the public ceremony, he used two bibles-- one from Abraham Lincoln and one a "traveling bible" used by Martin Luther King Jr.