Though primarily a term for the Scriptures used by millions of Jews today, it is at times used to describe the Old Testament used in Christianity. The Old Testament is basically the same as the Hebrew Bible with some changes in book order with some additions/modifications that in no way changes the main message of the writings as a whole.
Christians still call the Hebrew Bible the Old Testament.
The Hebrew Bible is not Babylonian.The Hebrew Bible is not Babylonian.
Hebrew was originally used for speaking and communicating. It still is used for that.
The Hebrew Bible is used for prayer, study, and is read from on special ocassions such as Holidays and Shabbat. The Torah (the first part of the Hebrew Bible) is also read from on Mondays and Thursdays.
No, there is not.
The Bible is never translated TO Hebrew and Greek in any church because it was originally written in Hebrew and Greek.It is translated FROM Hebrew and Greek, but this is done by the publisher of the printed Bible used in the church. It is not done by a church member.
When the Hebrew bible was first translated into Greek, Hebrew was still a spoken language and there is know way to know how many words existed at that time. The Hebrew Bible has about 8000 Hebrew words in it, but the spoken language at that time would have had many more than that. Most spoken languages have between 40,000 and 140,000 words, depending on how you decide what a word is.
The Hebrew word for faith is emunah (××ž×•× ×”)
No. The books of the Hebrew Bible were written almost entirely in Hebrew. Only a few verses were written in Aramaic.
In the bible the word STILL is used when Jesus tells the storm to be still.
The closest translation of the keyword "Bible" in the Hebrew Bible is "Tanakh."
No. There is no mention of Romans in the Hebrew Bible. The Romans conquered Judea After the Hebrew Bible was already canonized.