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"Thy
word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path"
Ps 119:105 |
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INTRODUCTION
In this study we will
examine what is commonly known as The Bible.
We will ask questions as to:
What is the Bible?
The Bible?
Where Did It Come From?
Why Is It Important?
How Does It Function?
How It Is Studied?
Click on the
above topics highlighted in yellow to go to that material.
WHAT
IS THE BIBLE?
The word
"bible" is derived from a Latin word, biblia, which in
turn is derived for the Greek word biblos
- biblos . The Greek word biblos was derived from
the ancient Egyptian form of writing on papyrus which could be rolled
up, hence a scroll (in the New Testament and Septuagint the Greek
word translated scroll is biblos) then later as parchment was
developed from animal skins and bound into a codex, it became the term
for book.
The Bible is in actual fact a collection of "books" or
writings that were written over a period of some 1600 years, form the
earliest Old Testament book (scroll) written in Hebrew to the last New
Testament book, Revelation written in Greek.
The Bible
is the collection of sacred books of the Christian
faith.
The Bible includes the 39 sacred writings of the Jewish religion called
by Christians the Old Testament, and 27 sacred writings produced by the
Christian religion. There are therefore 66 books in the Bible.
When we speak of the Bible we have reference to the book of the
Christian faith which contains 66 books, but Christians through the ages
have differed somewhat as to what books should be included in the
Bible. Non Roman Catholic Christians have insisted that there are
only 66 books in the sacred writings of the Christian faith, but Roman
Catholic Bibles have included a number of other religious writings known
as the Apocrypha. Non Roman Catholic Christians (most often
referred to as Protestants) recognize the religious value of the
Apocrypha, but have not considered them on the same level as the sacred
writings of the 39 Old Testament and 27 sacred writings of the New
Testament. Non Roman Catholic Protestant Bibles, therefore, do not
normally include the Apocryphal books in the Bible.
Christians speak of the sacred writings of the Bible as the divinely,
or Holy
Spirit inspired Scriptures
(we will discuss this concept below under another section of this
study). For Christians the Bible is normative
for Christian faith (by normative we mean that Christian faith is shaped
and determined by Scripture), and therefore authoritative.
We should note that the sacred writings of Judaism are the
same sacred writings Christians include in their Old Testament.
The chief difference is the order in which they are grouped, and the
names some of them are known by.
Although most of the Old Testament was originally written in Hebrew
(portions of it have come down to us in Aramaic), the Hebrew Old
Testament was translated into Greek around 270 BC, possibly in
Alexandria, since many Jews could no longer read Hebrew and Greek was
the common language of the day. We call the Greek Old Testament
the Septuagint or simply the LXX (70 since it was believed to be
translated by 70 Greek scholars). Most of the Old Testament
quotations in the New Testament are from the Septuagint since this was
the "Bible" of the early Christian church before the New
Testament books were written in the first century.
The Bible traces the saving working of God in history from the creation
through the times of Abraham, Jacob, and Isaac, then through the Mosaic
period and the times of the Jewish Kings and Prophets, finally
culminating in the story of the coming of Jesus as God's chosen savior
(Messiah or Christ) and the establishment and early growth of the
Christian church. We commonly speak, therefore, of the Bible revealing
God's plan of salvation
for fallen mankind. The Bible is also understood as the history
of man's redemption
from sin. It is the story of God's
unfailing love for
his creation which culminated in his sending his unique son, Jesus, to
die on the cross to save his creation. We could call the Bible the
story of God's steadfast love for mankind |
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