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How the Story of the Way Bible was Made and Who Collected Parts of the Bible?
I am asking about, who made and collected parts of the Christian Bible? Ten point for the best answer.
2 Answers
- TruprincessLv 49 years agoFavorite Answer
ca. 600 B.C.E. | Ezra the Scribe reconstructs the Hebrew scriptures destroyed by the Babylonians
ca. 250 B.C.E. | Formation of the Septuagint commences; according to legend, with the Hebrew Torah translated into Greek in Alexandria at the command of Ptolemy II Philadelphus (285–246 B.C.E.)
ca. 50–60 | First Christian texts (some of the Pauline Epistles) written
ca. 65–70 | Gospel of St. Mark composed
ca. 80–90 | Gospels of St. Matthew and St. Luke, and Acts of the Apostles composed
ca. 85–95 | Gospel of St. John composed
late 1st century | Other letters composed (of James, of Peter, of John, to the Hebrews)
ca. 95 | Apocalypse / Revelation of John composed
ca. 100 | Council of Jamnia determines the canonical text of the Hebrew Bible, known as the "Masoretic" text
ca. 125 | Earliest surviving manuscript of a gospel written (St. John, known from fragments)
second century | Old Testament books start to be individually translated from Hebrew into Syriac
first half 2nd century | Christian writings—letters, gospels, and apocalypses—multiply; Pauline Epistles circulate as a collection
early 3rd century | Origen of Alexandria compiles a comparative edition of the Old Testament in Hebrew and Greek, the Hexapla
303 | Emperor Diocletian orders the destruction of Christian books during the "Great Persecution"
332 | Constantine commissions Bishop Eusebius to supply the churches he has founded in Rome with complete Bibles
mid–4th century | Codex Sinaiticus, the earliest surviving complete Christian Bible, is made in Caesarea
363 | Council of Laodicea lists 26 canonical books for reading in church (omitting Revelation)
ca. 382 | St. Jerome enters the service of Pope Damasus and is commissioned to produce a Latin edition of the Bible—the Vulgate
383 | Death of Ulfilas, "Apostle to the Goths," who translated the Bible into the Gothic language
393 | Council of Hippo and Council of Carthage (397) both name the 27 books of the New Testament we know today
5th century | Syriac translations of Old Testament and New Testament books combined to form the Peshitta,the standard text for Syriac-speaking Churches
early 5th century | Greek alphabet adapted by the missionary St. Mesrob to produce those of Armenia and Georgia
431 | Council of Ephesus condemns the views of Nestorius on the nature of Christ; Bishop Palladius is sent from Rome to believers in southern Ireland
451 | Council of Chalcedon condemns Monophysitism (the belief that Christ has only divine nature) and establishes five patriarchates—Constantinople, Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem
ca. 460–90 | St. Patrick's mission from the northern British Church to Ireland
563 | St. Columba leaves Ireland on voluntary exile to evangelize the Picts and the English, and founds the monastery of Iona in western Scotland
597 | Death of St. Columba; Pope Gregory the Great sends a Roman mission led by St. Augustine to Britain to convert the Anglo-Saxons
ca. 610 | The Prophet Muhammad begins preaching in Mecca
615–17 | Paul of Tella makes the Syrohexapla, a translation into Syriac of Origen's Hexapla
ca. 641 | Islamic conquest of eastern and southern Mediterranean complete
716 | Abbot Ceolfrith of Wearmouth–Jarrow sets off for Rome in retirement, taking one of three great complete bibles made by his community as a gift for the pope
735 | On his deathbed the scholar Bede, a monk at Wearmouth–Jarrow, translates St. John's Gospel into English.
800 | Emperor Charlemagne crowned in Rome, solemnizing the creation of a Carolingian Empire; Abbot Alcuin of Tours completes a single-volume edition of the Vulgate Bible, copied throughout the Carolingian Empire
869 | Byzantine Emperor Constantine sends St. Cyril as a missionary to the Slavs; Cyril invents the Glagolitic alphabet from which Cyrillic is descended
ca. 950–60 | Aldred glosses the Lindisfarne Gospels into Old English—the oldest surviving translation of the Gospels into English
ca. 962–1056 | Ottonian Empire succeeds the Carolingian in Europe
Source(s): More detailed chronolgy including other events relating to the spread of the Bible and Christianity: http://www.asia.si.edu/exhibitions/online/itb/html... How bible was made.This is very interesting: http://www.asia.si.edu/exhibitions/online/itb/html...