No Bible reference for this.
The HarperCollins Study Bible - New Revised Standard Version
Judas Maccabeus is mentioned in 1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees. These are considered 'deutero-canonical' books and are included in the Catholic Bible, but not the Protestant Bible.
1 Maccabees and 2 Maccabees actually are in the Catholic Bible, and can be read there. However, they were not accepted in the Hebrew Bible and are not in the Protestant Bible. One problem with the two books of Maccabees is that, although they were written around the same time and deal with the same period in Judean history, they are too much at variance as to what really happened. Moreover, 1 Maccabees is not really a religious document, while 2 Maccabees is considered by many to be simply too unrealistic to be taken seriously.
You can find a Greek Bible online, in Christian bookstores, or from academic publishers that specialize in religious texts. Many churches and libraries also have copies of the Greek Bible available for study and reference.
Jerusalem Bible was created in 1966.
No, as it does not contain the seven Deuterocanonical books (Tobias/Tobit, Judith, Ecclesiasticus/Sirach, Wisdom of Solomon, Baruch, I Maccabees, and II Maccabees)
The New Jerusalem Bible is Catholic.
New Jerusalem Bible was created in 1985.
Jerusalem is not a language
no. it is in 2 Maccabees 11:30
Mysteries of the Bible - 1994 Maccabees Revolution and Redemption 5-4 was released on: USA: 20 December 1997
The volume that contains the books of 1 and 2 Maccabees is called the Apocrypha. Those books and several others considered noncanonical (not authoritative doctrinally) were ultimately excluded from the Jewish and Protestant renditions of the Bible, though historically they were included in the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Jewish Bible), the Vulgate (a Latin translation of the Bible) and a number of other earlier translations, including Luther's Bible and the 1611 King James version. The Apocrypha are still included today, however, in the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox renditions of the Bible.