Lutheran Bible has 66 books and Catholic Bible has 73 books. There is no difference in the New Testament of Catholics and Lutheran. However, Catholics consider 7 more books as divine in the Old Testament of the Bible.
There is a Lutheran Church and a Catholic Church but no Lutheran Catholic Church.
Actually, it differs from version to version. Far more conversations are recorded in the Catholic Bible (known by scholars as the Vulgate Bible) due to the fact that additional books are included in the Catholic Bible (which are considered to be apocrypha, and are not included in the Bibles of the various protestant Christian faiths. The Lutheran Bible records more conversation than the Bibles written in English (whether the King James Bible or the New Standard Version or any of them in between) because the Lutheran Bible was written in German, which has lengthier sentences (due to German grammatical structure). So, in summary, the Catholic Bible has the most recorded conversations, followed by the Lutheran Bible, then followed by the various Bibles written in English.
Lutheran Study Bible was created in 2009.
Hitler was not a Lutheran. He was a Catholic, although in name only. He had many Lutheran and Roman Catholic priests and laity killed.
Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church was created in 1997.
Lutheran-Roman Catholic dialogue was created in 1964.
That would be correct. There are many words that are not in the Bible. (ie: Catholic, Lutheran; not even the word cross, or Christmas, or Easter, or Halloween) Neither is the word 'Bible', in the Bible.
Lutherans accept the Biblical canon accepted by the early Church as formally counted in the Synod of Hippo and the Council of Carthage. The apocryphal books later formally accepted by the Roman Catholic Church are concidered inspired and good for learning, but are not normally included in the lectionary of the Lutheran Church. So, basically the Lutheran Church accepts the same Bible as the rest of Western Christendom. Throughout the history of the Lutheran Church, clergy and theologians have been required to be fully educated in the Biblical languages. For this reason, a seperate, specifiallly Lutheran Bible has not been printed. The tradition is to always refer to the original text for the best accuracy. The most famous Lutheran Bible would have to be the Gutenberg Bible. Luther translated this Bible into the language of the people at a time when it was usually read in Latin by priests who knew Latin and most lay people did not.
As the bible is there for all to read at any time they do like, yes the Lutheran people and the Lutheran church do very much read the protestant bible.
Could it happen? Yes, if the Lutheran didn't know any better and the Catholic officiant mistakenly thought the Lutheran was Catholic. Is it common and accepted practice? No.
The Catholic Bible is more or less the same as other Bibles. The main prayer contained in any Bible is the Lord's Prayer.