Mine says, "Holy Bible"
Mine has titles for each book, at the top of each page. I have some that have chapter titles and some that don't.
MAKE SURE YOU HAVE ONE WITH TITLES.
Right after II Maccabees in my AV1611 it says in Matthew 5:18 "For verily I say vnto you, Till heauen and earth passe, one iote or one title, shall in no wise passe from the law, till all be fulfilled."
Not ONE TITLE shall pass.
:eek: :eek: :eek:
Does Your Bible Have Titles?
Discussion in '2005 Archive' started by Dr. Bob, Mar 10, 2005.
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"title" instead of "tittle"
This could be considered a change of sound between the 1611 edition and today's KJV that D. A. Waite overlooked in his inaccurate count of
"only 421 changes to the ear from the 1611 original compared with the 1917 Old Scofield King James Bible of today" (FUNDAMENTAL MIS-INFORMATION, p. 53). -
I might ask well ask you scholars in this thread since it is related. I have always wondered about the book Titles themselves: "Mathew", "Acts", "Genesis", etc.
I assume the books in the OT were probably named before Jesus' time. Is this correct and does anybody know who did it?
When were the New Testament books named and who named them?
Finally, who specifically divided the chapters and verses?
Excuse my ignorance, but this is something I never studied and although I remember being told about it in the past, I have forgotten the answers.
Thank you, -
The first time verse numbers were used was the the Greek New Testament published by Robert Estienne in 1551.
The first whole Bible to use both chapter and verse numbers was the 1560 Geneva in English. -
OT Book titles (not tittles) in our English Bible come from the Greek word (LXX) describing the contents of that Book.
OT Book titles in Hebrew are taken from the first word of each Book (in Hebrew). -
OT Book titles in Hebrew are taken from the first word of each Book (in Hebrew).Click to expand...
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The first word of Gen 1:1 in Hebrew is "Bereshit", thus the Hebrew title of the whole book is "Bereshit". The first word of Exodus 1:1 in Hebrew is "Shemot", thus the Hebrew title of the whole book is "Shemot".
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Thank you very much Dr. Bob and a special thanks to you, natters for you detailed explainations of the verses, chapters, etc. It is amazing the knowledge available on this website. This sure beats fussing about whether we can only have one translation in English.
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Just keep your iotes and titles straight, Phillip, and you'll be otay!
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some titles of some O. T. books as found in the
Matthew's Bible
The first book of Samuel called the first book
of the kings
The second book of Samuel called the second book of the kings
The third book of the kings after the reckoning of the Latinities, which after the Hebrews is called, the first of the kings
On some pages the title at the top of the
page as III Samuel while on other pages it has
III kings
The fourth book of the kings as the Latinites recken which the Hebrews call the second of the kings
The chronicles of the kings of Juda
The first book
The chronicles of the kings of Juda
The second book
The first book of Ezra the prophet
The second book of Ezra, otherwise called the
book of Nehemiah
The top of the page sometimes has II Ezra
and sometimes Nehemiah
The book of the preacher, otherwise called Ecclesiastes
The ballet of ballets of Solomon
The book of the prophet Jeremy -
Originally posted by Dr. Bob:
Just keep your iotes and titles straight, Phillip, and you'll be otay!Click to expand... -
I have an old KJV, dating from the 1880s, & it has the titles of the books in Gothic print, as well as the first letter of the first word in each book enlarged & in Gothic. The names of the OT books are close to what Logos lists above, with the NT titles being, "The Gospel According to St. Matthew", "The First Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians", etc.