Love justice, you who govern the earth, turn
your minds to the Lord in a righteous way, and seek him with an upright heart.
For he will be found by those who do not put him to the test, and he will
reveal himself to those who do not cease to have confidence in him. (Wisdom
1:1-2, New Catholic Bible)
Today is my mom’s birthday, by the way. She would have been 99. Holy cow! How is that possible?
And how is it possible that it’s been a month since I’ve written here about the Bible? Four weeks ago, I told you I wanted to learn more about the Bible. I know that life got in the way, so I’m not going to beat myself up, but here I am, with lots of other things to tell you, but I’m going to stick to that promise.
Okay, most versions of the Bible are composed of 66 books: 39 in the Old Testament and 27 in the New. These versions include the King James Version, New King James Version, Good News Translation, New International Version, Revised Standard Version, New Living Translation, the Message, and many, many more. Those are mostly considered Protestant versions of the Bible, but there is also the Catholic Bible.
There are also many versions of the Catholic Bible, but the biggest difference is that they all contain seven additional books in the Old Testament. They are referred to as deuterocanonical books, or the Apocrypha, and include Tobit, Judith, Wisdom, Sirach, Baruch, 1 Maccabees, and 2 Maccabees.
These were all in the original Bible, but during the Reformation, reformers like Martin Luther dropped those books. There is a long history of that, which I read online, but most of it was over my head. I would rather keep things simple, so I apologize to my Catholic friends. If you’ve never heard of those seven extra books, you can look them up on the internet.
The verse above is from one of those books, the Book of Wisdom. If you are familiar with the Bible, you may remember the Book of Proverbs, written by King Solomon. Bible scholars used to think he also wrote the Book of Wisdom, but they have since decided that is not true, and no one knows who wrote it.
And just in case your head is already spinning, there are other versions of the Bible with even many more books. I don’t have any opinion of them one way or the other; I’m just going to stick to my good old 66-book New International Version of the Bible, which I have had ever since I can remember. And which I have always counted on to speak God’s truth to me.
(The above picture is of the Central Library in Ulm, Germany. The glass, pyramid structure stands in sharp contrast to the medievel buildings around it, but it surely contains many, many books.)


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