The Protestant Old Testament is similar to the Hebrew Bible. The Protestant Bible also contains the New Testament, however. This includes the four gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke and John); the Acts of the Apostles; Paul's letters (one to the Romans, two to the Corinthians, one each to the Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians and Colossians, two to the Thessalonians, two to Timothy, one to Titus, one to Philemon); the letter to the Hebrews (which has often been attributed to Paul); one letter from James, two from Peter, three from John, and one from Jude; and the Revelation of John.
The teachings of Judaism can be found in the The Hebrew Bible, the Mishna, The Talmud, and many other texts.
The book of Tobit is one of the texts in Greek that are correctly called Deuterocanonical by Catholics, and are entitled (less correctly) Apocrypha by Protestants. During the Reformation, only the books belonging to the Hebrew Bible (in Hebrew and Aramaic) were included in the Protestant Old Testament, whereas Catholics continued to include the Greek texts in their Old Testament, as well as the Hebrew and Aramaic texts.
The Protestant Bible has no specific name associated with it, other than "the Bible" or "the Holy Bible." The distinction is usually in the content; the Protestant Bible omits the Apocrypha and the Deuterocanonical books usually included in Roman Catholic texts. Both Catholic and Protestant Bibles come in a wide variety of translations.
The Dead Sea Scrolls were found in eleven caves around Qumran. They were found by a sheep herder. The scrolls were found inside sealed pots/jars in the caves. They were 972 previously undiscovered texts from the Hebrew Bible.
The Faith Chapter of the Bible is found in Hebrews 11. Enjoy the read :)
Yes, it can be found in Psalms 83 v 18 in the King James Version. "Jehovah" is an English word, the bible was originally not however written in English but was written in Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek. "Jehovah" (like Jesus, Jerusalem, John and Joseph) is an English transliteration of the Hebrew personal name for God written in the Hebrew letters that correspond to the roman letters YHWH. This name (translated in English as" Jehovah") was found in the original texts of the bible nearly 7000 times.
The Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) and the Talmud are the most authoritative. Pretty much everything else is derived from these two.
Primarily those based on the King James version of the Bible are not acceptable. It does not include the apocrypha and has had too many texts altered to fall in line with Protestant beliefs.
All protestant churches use the Holy Bible as their sacred texts in the same way as the Roiman Catholic Church. The only minor difference is that in the Roman Bible some books are included that are not regarded as worthy of being called 'scripture' in the Protestant Churches. In 'protestant' bibles these books (like the Maccabees, Tobit, baruch etc) are often included in a separate section.
The Jewish bible is commonly referred to as the old testament or the Tanakh or the Hebrew Bible.*The most important texts are:the Torah (first five books of the Bible)the Bible, also called the Tanakh (known to Christians as the old testament)The MishnahThe TalmudAnd various historical writings from scholars and rabbis, such as the Shulchan Aruch, the Mishneh Torah, and the Zohar.*Only the Christians refer to the Hebrew Bible as "the Old Testament".
Yes as the bible is he christian holy book and no one else on earth uses it. However the Muslim and Hebrew religion use similar texts of the same origin
The "tanakh" or Hebrew Bible. In the Eastern Orthodox Church the comparable texts are known as the "Septuagint" (which, however, includes additional books).