One of the books in the Bible that discusses faithfulness is the book of Psalms. Another book in the Bible that discusses faithfulness is the book of Lamentations.
No. Quran has some accounts taken from the five books of the Bible.
This is what I quoted which is the answer to your question;The books in the bible are named after Prophets and People in the bible. Some books are written by themselves or 1 person writes more than 1 book.
There are 66 books of the Bible. Most of the 66 have some history in them. There are only about 2 that don't.
The 'author' of the entire Bible is God. There are multiple writers of the various books - some known and some attributed.
books and stories of saints study guides to help understand the bible. . .
I think you refer to the Apocrypha, a collection of 10 or 11 books that were never accepted as Bible books in the first few centuries when the Bible books were chosen, though our Roman Catholic brethren accept them in their Bible. They were not chosen because they were sometimes contradictory to the general Bible doctrine.
They are the same book, but the bible has some books that the Torah does not.
There are two Books of Chronicles in the Bible, though some consider they may have originally been one book.The protestant bible has a total of 66 books in it. while the catholic bible has a total of seven more books in their bible.The Bible contains 66 books: 39 in the Old Testament and 27 in the New Testament.
Some books of the bible have 2 or or more parts. So where there are 57 names of books there are effectively 66 boks in total.
The books that form what is now known as the Bible were not originally written in order to be included in a 'Bible'. They were simply written to meet the religious or political purposes of their times. When, later, the concept of a collection of books, a 'Bible', came to the fore, some books were included and some were not.Until the first Bibles were compiled, there were no books in the Bible, to be taken out. It was merely a case of which of the many hundreds of potentially suitable books would be included, and which would not.Having said that, the Catholic Church included, and still includes, 15 'Deuterocanonical' books in its Old Testament. These were not included in the Hebrew Bible and, on the precedent of the Hebrew Bible, are not included in the Protestant Bible. Even the Catholic Church regards the Deuterocanonical books as not inspired in the same way as the canonical books are.
It depends on the denomination, but the general answer is No. Even if it has only the books present in the Jewish Bible, as opposed to some deuterocanonical books, it have extra chapters in some of the later books (like Daniel) and the order in a Protestant Old Testament will certainly be different than the Jewish Bible.
There are 17 other books referenced in the Bible, but not in the Bible. Some of them have been lost or destroyed, others like the 'Book of Jasher' and Enoch are available from book stores.