Some of the writings in the Old Testament ( Hebrew Scriptures) go back more than 1000 years Before Christ. The New Testament was written after Jesus death, between 40-100 AD
Another Answer:
Around the third or forth Centuries. Protestant Bibles, such as the KJV, were written during the 15Th Century.
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.
Actually, it differs from version to version. Far more conversations are recorded in the Catholic Bible (known by scholars as the Vulgate Bible) due to the fact that additional books are included in the Catholic Bible (which are considered to be apocrypha, and are not included in the Bibles of the various protestant Christian faiths. The Lutheran Bible records more conversation than the Bibles written in English (whether the King James Bible or the New Standard Version or any of them in between) because the Lutheran Bible was written in German, which has lengthier sentences (due to German grammatical structure). So, in summary, the Catholic Bible has the most recorded conversations, followed by the Lutheran Bible, then followed by the various Bibles written in English.
Roman Catholic AnswerYou are operating with a mistaken assumption. The Catholic Church wrote the Bible, the Catholic Church decided which books were canonical (included in the Bible), and the Catholic Church has conserved the Bible through the centuries. The only ones who changed any Scriptures in the Bible are the protestants, who, after fifteen centuries of a Bible preserved by the Catholic Church came along and threw books out of the Bible, and changed the meanings of books they would not throw out.
The word "catholic" does not appear anywhere in the bible.
The catholic bible has about seven books added to he bible.
All of the beliefs in the Bible are Catholic, the Bible was written by Catholics, and the New Testament that we use today was approved by the Catholic Church in 390 AD at the Council of Rome.
Catholic Press has written: 'The Holy Bible' -- subject(s): Accessible book
The Catholic Bible is just a translation of the original scriptures. The Old Testament was written in Hebrew with a few passages in Aramaic. The New Testament was written in Koine Greek.The Catholic Bible has been translated into almost every language on Earth.
Roman Catholic AnswerThere is only one Bible, it was written by the Catholic Church, preserved for centuries by the Catholic Church, and is interpreted by the Catholic Church. There is no other.
The term 'catholic' in this sense means 'universal.' In that the Bible is worldwide, it Is catholic. This has nothing to do with the Catholic Church.
If you are talking about the Bible and Catholic tradition then yes the Bible came first and tradition came second
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
The New Jerusalem Bible is Catholic.
Friedrich Staphylus has written: 'The Apologie of Fridericus Staphylus, 1565' -- subject(s): Apologetic works, Bible, Catholic Church, Versions, Catholic vs. Protestant
No, the Book of Enoch is not included in the Catholic Bible.
Actually, it differs from version to version. Far more conversations are recorded in the Catholic Bible (known by scholars as the Vulgate Bible) due to the fact that additional books are included in the Catholic Bible (which are considered to be apocrypha, and are not included in the Bibles of the various protestant Christian faiths. The Lutheran Bible records more conversation than the Bibles written in English (whether the King James Bible or the New Standard Version or any of them in between) because the Lutheran Bible was written in German, which has lengthier sentences (due to German grammatical structure). So, in summary, the Catholic Bible has the most recorded conversations, followed by the Lutheran Bible, then followed by the various Bibles written in English.