Christians call the Hebrew Bible the Old Testament.
For Jews, the Hebrew Bible is called the Tanakh. For Christians it is the Old Testament.
Yes, Christians do call the Bible the Word of God.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe Hebrew Bible, which Christians refer to as the "Old Testament" came from Judaism.
Yes. Christians follow the Holy Bible.
Christians call them the apocrypha. Jews call them sfarim chitzonim (הספרים ×”×—×™×¦×•× ×™×™× ×œ×ª× "ך).
There is no mention of "hell" in the Hebrew Bible, nor is there any ancient Hebrew word for "hell". The concept didn't exist until the time of the earliest of Christians.
All English copies of the Hebrew Scriptures are translated from Hebrew to English. These books are always called The Hebrew Bible (or the Tanakh, תנ״ך)Christians refer to these books as "The Old Testament"
The Hebrew Bible (called "old testament" by Christians) is called Tanakh (×ª× ×´×š) in Hebrew, which is an acronym for the 3 section of the Bible: Torah, Prophets, and Writings.
This is know as the Bible, which includes the Hebrew Torah and letters writen by the apostles.
The Hebrew Bible consists mostly of what we would call the Old Testament.
The Jewish bible is commonly referred to as the old testament or the Tanakh or the Hebrew Bible.*The most important texts are:the Torah (first five books of the Bible)the Bible, also called the Tanakh (known to Christians as the old testament)The MishnahThe TalmudAnd various historical writings from scholars and rabbis, such as the Shulchan Aruch, the Mishneh Torah, and the Zohar.*Only the Christians refer to the Hebrew Bible as "the Old Testament".