Some Old Testament verses that discuss the salvation of Gentiles include Isaiah 49:6, Isaiah 56:6-8, and Psalm 22:27. These verses highlight God's plan to include all nations in His salvation.
There are 23,145 verses in the Old Testament and 7,958 verses in the New Testament.
There are 27,570 verses in the Old Testament.
Romans 11:17 and Romans 11:24 are two of the verses that mentions olive trees, both verses are about God opening the Kingdom of God to the Gentiles and about the Jewish people who do accept God's salvation as well.
In the King James version, many verses speak of salvation without using the word, but 158 verses mention the word 164 times.
There are 39 books in the Old Testament and 27 books in the New Testament (a total of 66 books in the Bible). There are 23,145 verses (KJV) in the Old Testament and 7,957 verses (KJV) in the New Testament. If all verses were equal, that would put the Old Testament at 74.4% and the New Testament at 25.6% of the entire Bible.
12,440 times in whole bible
There are about 7,959 verses in the New Testament of the Bible. The Old Testament has many more, about 23,214. These figures are based on the King James Version.
Most of the the first four books of the New Testament is about Jesus, so many of those verses are about Him. There are many verses in the Old Testament about His coming.
yes there is some verses about money 5 verses
The shortest book in the old testament is Obadiah-22 verses only.
2 John has 13 verses , the shortest book and the lest verses
It depends on what you are asking. The New Testament has many verses that discuss the Jews and the gentiles. The early church was comprised of some pagans and a number of Jews who had come to believe that Jesus was the messiah. There were some very real questions in those early days about whether only Jewish believers (Hebrew-Christians) were the authentic members of the church, and whether the gentiles would be saved. Interestingly, in other verses, addressed to Jews who did not accept Jesus, the question was whether a person who remained Jewish and did not accept Jesus could be a member of the new Christian faith. (The conclusion of the church was that they could not; believing in Jesus was essential to salvation, and anyone who did not accept him would not be saved.) The church ultimately rejected Jewish customs and practices like keeping kosher or being circumcised, and moved away from its Jewish roots; it instead decided that it would reach out to the gentiles, since most Jews did not seem eager to embrace the new Christian faith. Thus, there is a verse in Acts 11:17-19, which explains, "So if God gave them [the gentiles] the same gift as those of us who believed in the Lord Jesus Christ who was I to think that I could stand in god's way?" When they heard this, they had no further objections and praised God, saying, "So then, even to the Gentiles God has granted repentance that leads to life."