
How We Got The Bible
Ten Key Points!
"All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for
reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: That the man of God
may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works."
2 Timothy 3:16-17 (The Holy Bible)
1. The Bible is inspired by God (2 Timothy 3:16-17; 2 Peter 1:20-21)
2. The Bible is made up of 66 different books that were written over 1600 years (from
approximately 1500 BC to AD 100) by more than 40 kings, prophets, leaders, and followers of
Jesus. The Old Testament has 39 books (written approximately 1500-400 BC). The New
Testament has 27 books (written approximately AD 45-100). The Hebrew Bible has the same text
as the English Bible's Old Testament, but divides and arranges it differently.
3. The Old Testament was written mainly in Hebrew, with some Aramaic. The New Testament was
written in Greek.
4. The books of the Bible were collected and arranged and recognized as inspired sacred
authority by councils of rabbis and councils of church leaders based on careful guidelines.
5. Before the printing press was invented, the Bible was copied by hand. The Bible was copied
very accurately, in many cases by special scribes who developed intricate methods of counting
words and letters to insure that no errors had been made.
6. The Bible was the first book ever printed on the printing press with movable type (Gutenberg
Press, 1455, Latin Bible).
7. There is much evidence that the Bible we have today is remarkably true to the original writings.
Of the thousands of copies made by hand before 1500, more than 5,300 Greek manuscripts from
the New Testament alone exist today. The text of the Bible is better preserved than the writings
of Plato or Aristotle.
8. The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls confirmed the astonishing reliability of some of the copies
of the Old Testament made over the years. Although some spelling variations exist, no variation
affects basic Bible doctrines.
9. As the Bible was carried to other countries, it was translated into the common language of the
people by scholars who wanted others to know God's Word. Today there are still 2,000 groups
with no Bible in their own language.
10. By AD 200, the Bible was translated into seven languages; by 500, 13 languages; by 900, 17
languages; by 1400, 28 languages; by 1800, 57 languages; by 1900, 537 languages; by 1980,
1,100 languages; by 2006, 2,426 languages have some portions of the Scripture.
Source: The World Christian Encyclopedia; Wycliffe, International.

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