one sentence is: Jesus wept.
It depends. If you are refering to the Bible as a proper name as in "I am going to read the Bible." than yes. However if you are refering to it as a figure of speech, "This textbook will become your bible." then no.
Atari was the genesis of home video game systems
• A young sheep is called a lamb. • We ate lamb for supper. • Jesus is often referred to in the Bible as the Lamb of God.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is not a proper noun.
One possible topic sentence could be: "Martin Luther sought to engage in debates on issues like indulgences, salvation by faith alone, the authority of the Pope, and translation of the Bible into the vernacular."
The first sentence in the Bible is "In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth."
Have you read your Bible today?
I am incredulous towards the bible.
A better question: is "Why consider the bible to God?" an English sentence?
In my R.S (Religious Studies) exam I didn't have to so the answer is no.
The only difference between the "Catholic Bible" and the "protestant Bible" is that the protestant Bible not longer contains the Deuterocanonical books of the Old Testament (Tobit, Judith, Wisdom, Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, I and II Maccabees, parts of Esther, and Daniel. There is no sentence in the Bible that contains a sentence condemning blood transfusions.
The Bible is known as the word of God.
the Bible is considered a colossus to Christians .
you can read about the archangel in the bible. is one sentence you could use.
The bible is a didactic collection of writings.
For many decades, Black's Law Dictionary was the bible for lawyers. The Bible was read during every service.
The speaker didn't mistreat the Bible but he made an indirect reference to the Bible.