It's just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church.
The first Bible put together as one book by the Catholic Church was at the Council of Rome in A.D. 382 by Pope Damasus. It used authorized the Septuagint - the Old Testament in Greek used by Our Blessed Lord and the New Testament books as we have them today.
For the first 300 years of Christianity, there was no Bible as we know it today. Christians had the Old Testament Septuagint, and literally hundreds of other books from which to choose. The Catholic Church realized early on that she had to decide which of these books were inspired and which ones weren't. The debates raged between theologians, Bishops, and Church Fathers, for several centuries as to which books were inspired and which ones weren't. In the meantime, several Church Councils or Synods, were convened to deal with the matter, notably, Rome in 382, Hippo in 393, and Carthage in 397 and 419. The debates sometimes became bitter on both sides. One of the most famous was between St. Jerome, who felt the seven books were not canonical, and St. Augustine who said they were. Protestants who write about this will invariably mention St. Jerome and his opposition, and conveniently omit the support of St. Augustine. I must point out here that Church Father's writings are not infallible statements, and their arguments are merely reflections of their own private opinions. When some say St. Jerome was against the inclusion of the seven books, they are merely showing his personal opinion of them. Everyone is entitled to his own opinion. However, A PERSONS PRIVATE OPINION DOES NOT CHANGE THE TRUTH AT ALL. There are always three sides to every story, this side, that side, and the side of truth. Whether Jerome's position, or Augustine's position was the correct position, had to be settled by a third party, and that third party was the Catholic Church.
. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the Catholic Church. Thus there is no "Roman Catholic Bible."
the bible
Roman Catholic AnswerYes, the Bible contains the book of Ruth.
The Roman Catholic Religion uses The Bible.
Roman Catholic AnswerOf course not! There is only one Bible, commonly referred to as the Holy Bible.
Roman Catholic AnswerThe Gospels in the Bible are Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. The "Catholic Bible" is the Bible as used by the Church for two millenium.
No, he used a Rheims Douay Bible. (Kennedy was the first Roman Catholic President of the US.)
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Roman Catholic AnswerThere are several, see links below:
.Catholic AnswerThe Roman Catholic religion is not mentioned in the Bible for several reasons. First of all, there officially is no such thing as the "Roman Catholic religion." You are asking about the Catholic Church and it never uses the epithet "Roman." That appelation was first commonly used by the English after the protestant revolt in that country. .Secondly, the Bible (New Testament) was written by the Catholic Church in the first century of its existence, as part of its preaching, it is a reflection of the Sacred Tradition handed down to it by Our Blessed Lord and the Apostles..Thirdly, the Bible wasn't put together as we have it now until the Councils of Carthage in 297 and 419 A.D., the list of the Canon of Scripture was officially promulagated by Pope Damasus I at the Council of Rome in 382, and dogmatically stated - infallibly, by the Council of Trent in the sixteenth century..In other words, the Catholic Church, which is the Catholic religion (referred to as some as the "Roman Catholic religion" actually wrote the New Testament and decided on the Canon of it, thus it is referred to in the New Testament just as "the Church."
Roman Catholic AnswerIf you are referring to the St. Timothy of the Bible, we do not have a date for his birth, but it was in the first century.
Roman Catholic.