There are both Protestant and Catholic versions available.
The Protestant Bible has no specific name associated with it, other than "the Bible" or "the Holy Bible." The distinction is usually in the content; the Protestant Bible omits the Apocrypha and the Deuterocanonical books usually included in Roman Catholic texts. Both Catholic and Protestant Bibles come in a wide variety of translations.
The Catholic canon is slightly different from the Protestant. And, there are numerous translations.
The New Jerusalem Bible is Catholic.
There are many Protestant translations, but the most common are the NIV and the KJV.
No, it is a Protestant Bible.
The Catholic Bible contains approximately 73,000 to 80,000 words, depending on the translation and the inclusion of different books in the Old Testament. The Catholic canon includes additional books, known as the Deuterocanonical books, which are not present in the Protestant Bible. The exact word count can vary between different translations and editions.
They differ in the number of books. Catholic has more number of books than Protestant. Protestant Bible only has 7 books while Catholic has 39. A catholic bible has Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur while a Protestant bible does not.
Roman Catholic AnswerNo, the NIV is a protestant Bible, and the publishing firm that puts this out strictly publishes protestant books.
Protestant or Catholic? (The Catholic Bible is longer, so there could be more examples.)
The catholic bible has about seven books added to he bible.
Maximilian Von Habsburg has written: 'Catholic and Protestant translations of the Imitatio Christi, 1425-1650' -- subject(s): Catholic literature, Protestant literature, Publishing, Christian literature, History and criticism, Translations, Imitatio Christi, History