Does anyone know the history of the book known as the Bible? I genuinely want to know your thoughts as I was brought up to read it but never knew its origins. I was thinking there would be scholars in here who could share some relevant information. Thanks in advance.
Which portion?
Long history of the Bible.
Moses started it with the Torah/Law about 5,600 years ago. (First five books)
The rest of the Tenakh (old testament) came about during the next 3000 years consisting of prophecies, songs, wisdom, and history.
There was about 600 years of nothing was added...although the Maccabees tried to add their history. But it has some errors and wonky theology.
Paper and ink was horribly expensive during this time. Just the first five books (Torah) would cost an equivalent of about $100,000 in today's dollars.
Roughly around 100-200 BC the Jews had to do something as 70% of the Jewish population couldn't read or write Hebrew. So they took 70+ scholars to translate the Tenakh into Greek in 70 days. They created what is referred to as the Septuagint.
The Apostles (including Paul) didn't start writing until around 60AD.
But by 100 AD they had a mostly complete Bible that was being used. (A couple of New Testament books missing until the Nicean Council in 300 AD where Jude was added last. ) The two guys who brought it abstained from voting for its inclusion...and there's a LOT of people making a mountain more out of this than what the truth is.
Then hand transcribed copies existed...becoming more and more Latinized in the west and Arabic in the East.
Finally, about the time when the printing press was invented the Bible was finally translated into various languages. German, French, Spanish and lastly English. (English has and continues to be the worst receptor language of them all)
Politics has played a role in Bible translating...and that created situations where people died for holding one by other supposed Christians "Doing God's work " .
1100-1400 is when the Catholic (general) church lost its grip on the nations of the world. Civil governments became a thing instead of the church ruling from Rome.
King Henry 8th is the one who created the Church of England and the first official English translation of the Bible. (Copied work of Miles Coverdale and he copied Wycliff)
New ancient manuscripts have been discovered over the years...masoretes had a system for the Old Testament and its proliferation. Each adding to the accuracy of the scriptures as they discovered copyist mistakes and added inserted sermon notes.
Around the turn of the 18th or 19th century they began to remove many of the "along side" books that were often included with bibles....these were never scripture or considered as such but used to help understand background information that assisted people with understanding scriptures.
The Festival of Light (mentioned in John's Gospel) is a celebration derived from the miracle during the Maccabean revolt. And without the books 1st&2nd Maccabees we really wouldn't know much about why this festival was happening. But it isn't included with scriptures anymore.
The common King James Bible of today has nothing to do with King James....he had died long before it was created. The current one named after him is actually a collaborative work between Cambridge and Oxford Universities in England over a century after King James had died. (shhhh...Cambridge did 90% of the work while Oxford claimed 50% of the glory)
Today there is collaborative works of the manuscripts known and published by United Bible Society for the New Testament and I'm forgetting the name of the Hebrew scriptures as it changes every so often...it was Biblica Hebraica Stutengartsia....and this is where all modern translations stem from. (Except for the Jehova Witnesses who made their junk up all along anyway)