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Bible |
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BibleThe sacred book of Judaism and Christianity, containing a collection of sacred writings (scriptures). The Old Testament, recognized by both Jews and Christians, is called the Hebrew Bible in Judaism. The New Testament comprises books recognized by the Christian church as sacred doctrine from the 4th century. The Roman Catholic Bible also includes the Apocrypha. Bible readingChristians believe that the Bible is the revealed ‘Word of God’; it is a written source of authority, passing on both spiritual and moral truth. In Christian church services, the Bible may be read by a Christian minister or by someone from the congregation. It is usually placed on a lectern (stand), which is often carved in the form of an eagle with outstretched wings. Sermons (religious lectures) are often based on a theme from the Bible.TranslationsIt was only in the 13th century that single-volume Bibles with a fixed content and order of books became common, largely through a Paris-produced Vulgate of 1200 and the Paris Bible of 1230. The first English translation of the entire Bible was by a priest, Miles Coverdale, in 1535; the Authorized Version, or King James Bible (1611), was long influential for the clarity and beauty of its language. A revision of the Authorized Version carried out in 1959 by the British and Foreign Bible Society produced the widely used US translation, the Revised Standard Version. A conference of British churches in 1946 recommended a completely new translation into English from the original Hebrew and Greek texts; work on this was carried out over the following two decades, resulting in the publication of the New English Bible (New Testament in 1961, Old Testament and Apocrypha in 1970). Another recent translation is the Jerusalem Bible, completed by Catholic scholars in 1966.
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The sequence of twelve chapters moves from something that may be called the oldest part of the Bible, the oral speaking of God to Moses and the prophets, and ends with that performance of Handel's Messiah. The hottest niche biblical texts right now are the Women of Color Study Bible, the Women of Color Devotional Bible, and for counterparts, the Men of Color Study Bible, all by Urban Spirit (formerly Nia Publishing) in Atlanta, in partnership with World Bible Publishers. It is clear that in telling the story of the English Bible from Tyndale to the New Revised English Bible, the author engages all contributions to biblical scholarship regardless of confessional differences. |
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