One scripture that alludes to this is Revelation 11:18 where it says that God will soon bring to ruin those who are destroying this earth.
Background: It's important to remember that God gave man the earth (Psalm 115:16) to 'cultivate it and take care of it, and fill it' (Genesis 2:15). His plan has not changed and he promises that, again, he will 'open his hand and satisfy the desire of every living thing'(Psalm 145:16) wiping out every tear from our eyes (Revelation 21:4+5) and returning the earth to it's paradisaic condition(Luke 23:38-43)(Psalm 37:9-11+29/Matthew 5:5), pollution-free morally, spiritually and physically (Numbers 35:33 / Jeremiah 3:1+2 / Malachi 1:7+8)(Ephesians 4:22-24)since he formed it to be inhabited (Isaiah 45:18)(Acts 17:26)and what he promises, is guaranteed to come true (Isaiah 55:11).
I suppose you could say that the Old Testament is a sort of prequel to the New Testament.
It would be fair to say the Old Testament is about 80% of the Bible. One must consider the length of Psalms and others being larger than any New Testament Book. The Gospels quote from the Old Testament nearly 700 times with the Book of Isaiah being referred to as the 'Little Bible.' So the New Testament represents about 20% of the Bible pages. That being said, many say the Law of Moses is done away with. But if they realized it was quoted nearly 250 times in the New Testament, even by Jesus Himself, they might think differently.
Mohammed was born after both the Old Testament (five books of the Bible plus Prophets) and the New Testament so naturally there is no mention at all of him.
Most dictionaries would say no. They define the Bible as "The Christian scriptures consisting of the books of the Old and New Testaments".
Roman Catholic AnswerThere is only a Bible, the Bible used by the Catholic Church is the entire New Testament and the entire Old Testament. The only thing that makes it a "Catholic" Bible is the guarantee in the front of it that it conforms to the Bible as accepted by the Church since the fourth century. And, no, nowhere in the Bible does it say anything about sprinkling for baptism.
See James 5:16 in the New Testament.
It does not say anywhere specifically that the bible was written on three continents, but we know that the some of the Pentateuch was written in Africa. The rest of the Old Testament, and most of the New Testament were written in different parts of Asia. Also some of Paul's epistles were written from Rome, which is in Europe. So that is why we say that the Bible was written on three continents.
There are many in the bible, and although I don't have my Bible with me right now they say in the old testament to stone them and rebuke (get rid of, push away) them. In the new testament, the one most Christians follow (I can't say for Catholics, but Jews follow the old testament usually), it says they are to be put out of the church, denied to be a pastor or priest, and should try to be led out of that path. Overall the new rules from the Bible say you shouldn't be gay and associated with Christianity at the same time. If you are one, you shouldn't be the other.
In King James version as worded "you will follow " there is zero instances in the new Testament.
It says New Testament, because the Bible is actually two different timeframes. If there was a center page it would depend on the translation and the printing company.
Apart from Christianity, you could say that all other religions do not accept the New Testament. (The religion that accepts the Old Testament, or Hebrew Bible, but not the New Testament, is Judaism.) It is also worth noting that Islam rejects the New Testament as written, but does not reject the spiritual nature of the events it describes. Islam holds the New Testament to be a corrupted form of Jesus's Ministry, something that is very important in Islam.
I think the person asking the question meant to say OldTestament. Neither the Old nor the New Testament was called that until they were compiled as the Bible in the late 14th century.