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Bible
The Jewish holy book that was largely incorporated into the Christian Bible
The Christian holy book
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A specific version, edition, translation, or copy of any of the above
Biblical
{i} book containing the Old and New Testaments (Christianity); book containing the Old Testament (Judaism)
A Bible is a copy of the Bible. Sacred scriptures of Judaism and Christianity. The Jewish scriptures consist of the Torah (or Pentateuch), the Neviim ("Prophets"), and the Ketuvim ("Writings"), which together constitute what Christians call the Old Testament. The Pentateuch and Joshua relate how Israel became a nation and came to possess the Promised Land. The Prophets describe the establishment and development of the monarchy and relate the prophets' messages. The Writings include poetry, speculation on good and evil, and history. The Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Bible includes additional Jewish writings called the Apocrypha. The New Testament consists of early Christian literature. The Gospels tell of the life, person, and teachings of Jesus. The Acts of the Apostles relates the earliest history of Christianity. The Epistles (Letters) are correspondence of early church leaders (chiefly St. Paul) and address the needs of early congregations. Revelation is the only canonical representative of a large genre of early Christian apocalyptic literature. See also biblical source, biblical translation
The analogous holy book of another religion
The Bible is the holy book on which the Jewish and Christian religions are based
tevrat ile ıncil