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  1. Catholics believe that whatever the Bible asserts to be true is actually true. Does this mean that God must have created the world in seven 24-hour days, or that Jesus wants us to cut off body parts if they lead us to sin?

  2. Catholics generally dont know their Bible as well as Protestants, especially evangelicals, whose worship and private devotion are centered on Scripture. Catholics rely on the Bible, of course, but they also turn to rituals to enact the full meaning of Scripture.

  3. Oct 12, 2023 · The Catholic Bible is based on the Latin Vulgate, which Jerome compiled in the late 300s. Jerome was among the few people who could read both Greek and Hebrew. He translated several books from the original language.

  4. Answer: There were nearly three decades between the Crucifixion and the first books of the New Testament and nearly eight decades between the Crucifixion and the last of them. Two generations at least were deprived of the Book of Revelation, surely one of the most critical of the books of the Bible.

  5. Catholics do not believe that the fullness of revelation is either Scripture alone or Scripture plus Tradition. Instead, the Second Vatican Council (in the document Dei Verbum, “The Word of God”) insists that Jesus himself “is both the mediator and the fullness of all revelation” (Dei Verbum 2).

  6. People ask if everything Catholics believe is found in the Bible. The answer? Both “yes” and “no.”. The Church “does not derive her certainty about all revealed truths from the Holy Scriptures alone” (Catechism of the Catholic Church [CCC] no. 82 Dei Verbum 9).

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  8. Sep 16, 2009 · Whereas evangelical Protestants believe the Bible is the ultimate test of all truth, Roman Catholics believe the Church determines what is true and what is not. In effect, this makes the Church a higher authority than Scripture.

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