Christmas is a celebration of the birth of Christ, and was not founded in Bible times. The birth of Christ can be referred to as the Nativity or just The Birth of Christ.
The first Latin translation of the Bible is known as the Vulgate. It was translated from the original Hebrew and Greek manuscripts.
Up until 1931 Jehovah's Witnesses were known as "Bible Students" (the International Association of Earnest Bible Students - IAEBS).
In order to see an example of a Baptist Christmas sermon, one simply must go to a Baptist church on Christmas. The Moody Bible Institute in Chicago is particularly well-known for its Christmas program.
There is no record of this in the original story by Dickens
Christmas day originally was on the day of Christmas
Christmas is not in the Bible. but his Ressurection is and that is more important.
It's not. Christmas itself was not a holiday during the time frame that the Bible encompasses.
The original name for the Christmas 'Cracker' is 'Cosaque' made by Thomas J Smith who invented the Christmas Cracker
to me it is "a Christmas carol" Bible twas the night before christmas.
AnswerThere is no original Holy Bible. The scriptures were written over a period of several centuries, before the religious authorities chose to select certain scriptures to be considered inspired. These scriptures were copied and recopied, before finally being incorporated into bound volumes that became known as the Bible.
There are no original versions of the Bible in the world today, but the closest we have now to the is the Received version of the New Testament in Greek and the Septuagint Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament.Answer:The book known as the Bible has been reworked and revisited many times during its existence from the first Jewish texts to the choice of the "official" Bible books during the middle ages. As a consequence there is no original version, just the present version.
The Bible does not mention Jesus' date of birth or the celebration of it, therefore it does not mention "Christmas", anywhere.