Matthew 5:44 - But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you,
Nothing!
Verses please
I suppose you could say that the Old Testament is a sort of prequel to the New Testament.
Twenty
Jesus never mentioned Purim in the New Testament.
Absolutely nothing. It's the old testament that says stuff about it, but if you follow the new testament you should know that Jesus was sent to earth to redeem Christians and render the arbitrary rules of the old testament obsolete.
The only martyr story in the New Testament is about St Stephen, who was reported to have been stoned by the Jews. Some say that this story may not be literally historical.
It would be fair to say the Old Testament is about 80% of the Bible. One must consider the length of Psalms and others being larger than any New Testament Book. The Gospels quote from the Old Testament nearly 700 times with the Book of Isaiah being referred to as the 'Little Bible.' So the New Testament represents about 20% of the Bible pages. That being said, many say the Law of Moses is done away with. But if they realized it was quoted nearly 250 times in the New Testament, even by Jesus Himself, they might think differently.
Some say that it is the book of Revelations, written by John.
Here it was the angel Gabriel who spoke to Mary, and not God.
Apart from Christianity, you could say that all other religions do not accept the New Testament. (The religion that accepts the Old Testament, or Hebrew Bible, but not the New Testament, is Judaism.) It is also worth noting that Islam rejects the New Testament as written, but does not reject the spiritual nature of the events it describes. Islam holds the New Testament to be a corrupted form of Jesus's Ministry, something that is very important in Islam.
The only direction about wearing mixed fabrics in the Holy Bible is in the Old Testament, although there is mention of the folly of patchingold wine-skins with new fabric! By the time of the New Testament most already knew about incompatible fabrics and how they rubbed against one another.