It is a protestant bible written in German.
The typical Protestant Bible excludes the Apocrypha.
No - the Apocryphal books are non-canonical, that is, they are not part of the Protestant Bible.
The 66 books of the Protestant Bible were originally written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek. The Old Testament was primarily written in Hebrew, with some portions in Aramaic, while the New Testament was written entirely in Greek.
No, it is a Protestant Bible.
The Protestant Bible is missing a number of books that are included in the Catholic Bible. Also, there are a number of passages in the Protestant Bible that have been altered a bit to agree with Protestant theology.
The Geneva Bible was printed in 1560 AD. It is considered the "Bible of the Protestant Reformation". It was also called the "Breeches Bible". It was a major translation of The Bible by a group of Protestant scholars.
The Protestant Reformation attempted to relate the Bible to believers. By doing this people could read the bible themselves and understand the word of God.
The Protestant Bible came from the Hebrew Masoretic text of the Old Testament and the Greek majority text of the New Testament. At the time of the reformation the translators were attempting to have the Bible in the common language of the people which was English.
Because it is a Protestant Bible.
The Protestant Reformation is called Protestant because it meant pro-Testimony, back to the Bible and not protest.Roman Catholic AnswerBecause protestant is what resulted from the "reformers" protesting the Church. Unfortunately they did not get "back to the Bible", as a matter of fact, they mutilated the Bible by throwing whole books out of it, and mistranslating it.
Edward Ryan has written: 'A short but comprehensive view of the evidences of the Mosaic and Christian codes' 'Analysis of Ward's Errata of the Protestant Bible' -- subject(s): Bible, Criticism, interpretation, History, Versions