John chapter 14 verse 6 says.. 6Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.
yes The answer actually is no. The bible of the original Hebrew text in Aramaic did not ever have the name jasus in it. As a matter of fact j did not even exist in any language until around the 1400's. The true and only name of your King and Savior is YHWH. Which is what you will see in the original text. Worshipping the name Jesus is blasphemy and the bible tells to not change his name and to not call him by any other name.
The Bible text is established by scholars engaged in studying the manuscripts that we have from the early church. The idea of chapters being "taken out of the Bible" assumes that we have a single manuscript that is the agreed-on text, and that is simply not true. (There is agreement for about 95% or so of the text, and no doctrinal issues depend on disputed readings). Almost any Bible will have alternate readings for some of the verses listed in the notes at the bottom of the page. Now if you look at John 8 in a modern Bible, you may see a heading note for it or you may see it in parenthesis. This is because the current opinion of most scholars is John 8 is not supported by the best and earliest manuscripts. On the other hand, the story there is very consistent with John's writing and Jesus's life and teachings, so it is included in the Bible but annotated. But the chapter has not been "taken out" of the Bible.
The Old testament came from the Hebrew and Aramaic texts called the Massaratic text and the New testament came from the Greek text called the Received Text or the Majority text. Because this Bible was translated from these texts is why it is the most reliable.The Geneva Bible existed before the King James as well as a German Bible from Martin Luther and Tyndale's Bible in England.
"Exodus" is a book in the Bible, not a word in the text of the Bible. The book of Exodus is in the Bible once. It is the second book in the Bible, right after Genesis.
Verse, text,or scripture.
no
No, as a matter of fact, the Bible says the exact opposite, that Jesus never sinned: 2 Corinthians 5:21 For he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.
Nowhere; that is not in the Bible. Maybe another religious text, but not the Bible. That I KNOW for sure that is not in the Bible if that is what you were referring to....
The beatitudes present in Matthew are:The poor in spirit; theirs is the kingdom of heaven.Mourners; they will be comforted.Those that hunger and thirst after righteousness; they will be filled.Those persecuted for seeking righteousness. The text says that theirs is the kingdom of heaven.The beatitudes present in the Gospel of Luke are:The poor. The text says that theirs is the kingdom of heaven."Those who are weeping". The text says that they "will laugh".The hungry. The text says that they will "be satisfied"."Followers of the Son of Man". The text says that theirs is the kingdom of heaven.The beatitudes present only in Matthew are:The meek. The text says that they will "inherit the earth".The merciful. The text says that they will "obtain mercy".The pure of heart. The text says that they will "see God".The peacemakers. The text says that they will be called "the sons of God". Other translations use the phrase "Children of God".
The Bible does not explicitly state that Salome is Jesus' sister. Salome is often identified as the sister of Jesus' mother Mary based on passages in the New Testament, but the exact familial relationship between Salome and Jesus is not clearly defined in the biblical text.
Decimal notation was invented long after the text of the Bible was set in final form, so the Bible says nothing about decimals.
An ancient text known as the Bible, of unknown authorship, claims that Jesus is god/the son of god. However, there is no other evidence and the grounds for this claim are questionable, as we do not know who wrote the Bible, and it was during a very superstitious time.
Very little is known of Mary's life in general. The Bible only addresses her relative to Jesus, and as such we only know a handful of pieces of her life that directly intersected with the early life and earthly ministry of Jesus. There is a text called the Protovangelion of James which focuses on her story, but this is a gnostic text written centuries afterward that, like all gnostic texts, had no connection to witnesses or any desire to do so. For this reason, it is not widely considered necessary or even likely accurate within Christianity. Muhammad borrowed from it heavily, however, and as such the Quran actually talks more about her than the Bible does.
No, the Bible does not speak about Prophet Muhammad. The Bible is the sacred text of Christianity and is focused on the teachings and prophecies of Jesus Christ. Muhammad is the central figure in Islam and is not mentioned in the Bible.
He didn't. The Bible at the time of Jesus was the Jewish Bible, but it was not a single text. Rather, there was the Torah, which was already canonized, plus the various books of the Prophets and Writings. There were a number of books where there was dispute about whether they were part of the canon or not. None of the Christian books of the New Testament had been written yet. In the years after Jesus, the early Church and the Jewish community both managed to hammer out which books are canon, and to a remarkable extent, they managed to agree on the books of the Hebrew Bible. Even so, the masoretic text (that is, the text of the Hebrew Bible used in all Jewish and Protestant translations) wasn't hammered out until over 500 years post Jesus.
Inductive Bible study looks at the Bible for what it says (trying not to read into the text what is not there). So, and inductive Bible is probably a Bible that doesn't add too much extra formatting or information about the Bible beyond what was present in the original.
Christians believe in the life, teachings, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. They follow the Bible as their sacred text and believe in the concept of salvation through faith in Jesus. Christians vary in their beliefs and practices, but the core tenets include love, forgiveness, and spreading the Gospel.