1.3.22

Written Authority - The Bible

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Development of the Bible

The Bible is the revealed Scripture of the Christian faith. Many Christians believe that every word in the Bible is true.

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Etymology (meaning)

  • The word Bible comes from the Greek word 'Biblia,' meaning 'books.'
  • The Bible is divided into two main sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament.
  • 'Testamentum' is Latin for 'covenant,' meaning promise or binding agreement.
  • Jesus made a new covenant with his followers, which replaced the old covenant of the Jews.
    • These reflect the Old and New Testaments.
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The Old Testament

  • The Old Testament includes the same books as the Tenakh of the Jewish tradition, but in a different order.
  • The first five books (the Pentateuch) are the writings of the Torah.
    • The Pentateuch follows the early history of the Jews' relationship with God.
  • The Old Testament also contains law, prophecy, poetry, liturgy, and history.
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The New Testament

  • The New Testament contains writings of early Christians. The first four books are the Gospels.
  • The word Gospel comes from old English 'Godspel'. Before that, the Greek 'ευαγγελιον᾽ ('euangelion'), meaning good news.
  • The Acts of the Apostles tells the story of the Apostles and the early church, continuing from Luke's Gospel.
  • The Epistles (letters) are the largest group of books written by early church members.
  • The last book is The Revelation of St John (Apocalypse).
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Canon

  • The canon is the official list of books chosen by different denominational authorities.
  • The Catholic Bible (The Canon of Trent) was finalised at the Council of Trent (1545-63).
  • The Catholic Bible has additional books in the Old Testament compared to the Protestant Bible: Tobit, Judith, Esther, 1&2 Maccabees, Wisdom, Sirach, and Baruch.
    • These additional books are sometimes called the 'Apocrypha' in Protestant Bibles, meaning 'hidden.'

Jump to other topics

1Year 7

1.1Origins of Abrahamic Faith

1.2Judaism

1.3Christianity

1.4Buddhism

1.5Disciplinary Knowledge

2Year 8

3Year 9

3.1Life & Death

3.2Extremism

3.3Equality

4Additional Concepts

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