There is no exact equivalent to the New Testament, but Homer's Iliad and Odessey together were somewhat the Greek equivalent to The Bible.
The Old Testament is sacred to Judaism
The 5th book of the 'Old Testament'(Hebrew Scriptures) is Deuteronomy The 5th book of the 'New Testament'(Greek Scriptures) is Acts
Christianity
Yes, James was originally written in Greek, as were all the New Testament books.
There is no book by the name of John in the Old Testament, nor is the name John mentioned in the Old Testament. The name John is a Greek name that comes from a Hebrew name. The Greek is Ἰωάννης which is pronounced ee-o-an'-nace and the Hebrew name it comes from is יוחנן which is pronounced yo-khaw-nawn'. So it is possible that the Hebrew equivalent of the name John does exist in the Old Testament.
The Torah is the book of law in the Jewish religion and included in the Old Testament of the Bible.
Christianity.
One may buy a Greek New Testament Bible through the vendor "Christian Book". They have a couple different formats and sizes for Greek bibles and have fair prices.
Arthur Fairbanks has written: 'A handbook of Greek religion' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Greek Mythology, Religion
Kenneth Samuel Wuest has written: 'Great Truths to Live by (Word Studies in the Greek New Testament, Book 6)' 'Ephesians and Colossians in the Greek New Testament for the English reader' 'Romans in the Greek New Testament for the English reader' -- subject(s): Bible, Commentaries 'The Pastoral Epistles' 'The New Testament' 'Mark in the Greek New Testament for the English reader' 'Great truths to live by from the Greek New Testament for the English reader' 'Studies in the vocabulary of the Greek New Testament for the English reader' -- subject(s): Bible, Biblical Greek language, Greek language, Language, style, Vocabulary 'Hebrews in the Greek New Testament for the English reader' -- subject(s): Bible, Commentaries
A:Every book in the New Testament was originally written in Greek and therefore presumably intended for a Greek-speaking audience. However, the form of Greek used in the gospels was Greek Koine, which would not have been used in writing for Greeks of the Greek mainland, but rather for people of the Middle Eastern area. Paul's epistles to the Corinthians and 1 Thessalonians were written to churches in Greece.
Deuteronomy. The name comes from deuteronomion, the title of the book as written in the Greek Septuagint version.