The Jewish people, for one.
A couple of things should be pointed out. One is that for Jews, there is only one "testament."
The other thing is that for Jews, the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) is accompanied by the Oral Torah and cannot be understood without it.
Christians still call the Hebrew Bible the Old Testament.
No. The Christian Bible contains the Hebrew scriptures in what we call the Old Testament. Christ and his teachings and the works of the Apostles are in the New Testament. Additionally, there are translation differences, additions, and order-changes between the Hebrew Bible or Tanakh and the Christian Old Testament.
The Old Testament (or Hebrew Bible) was written almost entirely in Hebrew. Some parts of the Old Testament were written in Aramaic. The New Testament was written in Greek.
The original text is not called the "Old Testament". It is called "the Hebrew bible. See related links for the complete Hebrew Bible online.
For Jews, the Hebrew Bible is called the Tanakh. For Christians it is the Old Testament.
The original Hebrew Bible that became the Old Testament was written in Hebrew and Aramaic. The Christian New Testament books of the Bible were written in Greek.
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.
Judaism uses the Old Testament, or Hebrew Bible. Christianity uses a Bible containing both the Old Testament and the New Testament.
There is no mention of the Trinity in either the Hebrew Bible or the Greek New Testament.
The Old Testament.
The Hebrew Bible consists mostly of what we would call the Old Testament.
The Old Testament of the Bible was translated from Hebrew to English and the New Testament from Greek.