The New American Standard Bible is not Catholic and is missing the deuterocanonical books removed by the Protestant Reformers. The New American Bible, however, is Catholic.
The New Jerusalem Bible is a translation of the Bible that contains certain Old Testament books (as well as additions to Daniel and Esther) that are found in the Catholic biblical canon but not in the Protestant biblical canon. Thus, it would be accepted by Catholics but not by Protestants.
It may be used by an denomination.
The Protestant Bible has no specific name associated with it, other than "the Bible" or "the Holy Bible." The distinction is usually in the content; the Protestant Bible omits the Apocrypha and the Deuterocanonical books usually included in Roman Catholic texts. Both Catholic and Protestant Bibles come in a wide variety of translations.
AnswerThe New Jerusalem Bible was written for Catholics and contains the Catholic deuterocanonical books and sections. There is no reason Protestants should not use this Bible, but they are unlikely to do so.
There are two versions: one Catholic and one Protestant. The version with Deuterocanonicals/Apocrypha is the Catholic version. Both are out of print, but you can purchase them used online. God bless you!
Catholic bibles and Protestant bibles contain the same 27 books in the New Testament.
Currently, three translations are approved for Catholic liturgical use: the New Jerusalem, the Revised Standard Edition (RSV), and the New American Bible (NAB)
New Jerusalem Bible was created in 1985.
There are 66 books in the bible. 39 in the Old Testament and 27 in the New Testament. 66 for the Protestant Bible. 73 for the Catholic Bible.
A new emphasis on The Bible among Protestant Christians protestant churches where simpler, plainer and looked like shacks compared to catholic churches. religious wars broke out between catholic and Luthern princes. 30 years after the peace of Augsburg occurred. the bible was translated from Latin to German. southern Europe mostly catholic.
13 times in the Catholic New International Version. 54 times in the Protestant King James Version.