Bible



the sacred scriptures of Judaism and Christianity. The Christian Bible consists of the Old Testament and the New Testament (qq.v.), with the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox versions of the Old Testament being slightly larger because of their acceptance of certain books and parts of books considered apocryphal by Protestants. The Jewish Bible includes only the books known to Christians as the Old Testament. The arrangements of the Jewish and Christian canons differ considerably. The Protestant and Roman Catholic arrangements more nearly match one another.

Traditionally the Jews have divided their scriptures (i.e., the Old Testament) into three parts: the Torah (the “Law”), or Pentateuch; the Nevi'im (the “Prophets”); and the Ketuvim (the “Writings”), or Hagiographa. The Pentateuch, together with the book of Joshua (hence the name Hexateuch) can be seen as the account of how Israel became a nation and of how it possessed the Promised Land. The division designated as the “Prophets” continues the story of Israel in the Promised Land, describing the establishment and development of the monarchy and presenting the messages of the prophets to the people. The “Writings” include speculation on the place of evil and death in the scheme of things (Job and Ecclesiastes), the poetical works, and some additional historical books.

In the Apocrypha of the Old Testament, various types of literature are represented; the purpose of the Apocrypha seems to have been to fill in some of the gaps left by the indisputably canonical books and to carry the history of Israel to the 2nd century BC.

The New Testament is by far the shorter portion of the Christian Bible, but, through its associations with the spread of Christianity, it has wielded an influence far out of proportion to its modest size. Like the Old Testament, the New Testament is a collection of books, including a variety of early Christian literature. The four Gospels deal with the life, the person, and the teachings of Jesus, as he was remembered by the Christian community. The book of Acts carries the story of Christianity from the Resurrection of Jesus to the end of the career of Paul. The Letters, or Epistles, are correspondence by various leaders of the early Christian church, chief among them the Apostle Paul, applying the message of the church to the sundry needs and problems of early Christian congregations. The Book of Revelation (the Apocalypse) is the only canonical representative of a large genre of apocalyptic literature that appeared in the early Christian movement.



(Encyclopaedia Britannica)

 
 



 

 
 


Gustave Dore

 

born Jan. 6, 1832, Strasbourg, Fr.
died Jan. 23, 1883, Paris


French printmaker, one of the most prolific and successful book illustrators of the late 19th century, whose exuberant and bizarre fantasy created vast dreamlike scenes widely emulated by Romantic academicians.

In 1847 he went to Paris and from 1848 to 1851 produced weekly lithographic caricatures for the Journal pour Rire and several albums of lithographs (1847–54). His later fame rested on his wood-engraved book illustrations. Employing more than 40 woodcutters, he produced over 90 illustrated books. Among his finest were an edition of the Oeuvres de Rabelais (1854), Les Contes drolatiques of Balzac (1855), thelarge folio Bible (1866), and the Inferno of Dante (1861). He also painted many large compositions of a religious or historical character and had some success as a sculptor; his work in those media, however, lacks the spontaneous vivacity of his illustrations.
 


241 Bible Illustrations
 

by Gustave Dore

 

 

 


THE OLD TESTAMENT
 
 
Ezra worships God
Ezra in Prayer
Ezra reads the law
Ezra Reading the Law in the Hearing of the People
Nehemiah exhorts the Israelites
Nehemiah Viewing Secretly the Ruins of the Walls of Jerusalem

Rebuilding the Temple
The Rebuilding of the Temple

Job praises God
Job Hearing of His Ruin
Job speaks
Job and His Friends
Jonah saved from the whale
Jonah Cast Forth by the Whale
Jonah preaches in Nineveh
Jonah Preaching to the Ninevites
The angel and Tobias
Tobias and the Angel
The angel Raphael
The Angel Raphael and the Family of Tobit
Death of Holofernes
Judith and Holofernes
Judith’s victory
Judith Showing the Head of Holofernes
Esther before the king
Esther Before the King
Baruch the prophet
Baruch
Susanna in the bath
Susanna in the Bath
The justification of Susanna
Justification of Susanna
Daniel and the priests of Bel
Daniel Confounding the Priests of Bel
Mattathias slays the apostate
Mattathias and the Apostate
Mattathias exhorts the Jews
Mattathias Appealing to the Jewish Refugees
Judas Maccabeus and the soldiers
Judas Maccabeus Pursuing Timotheus
The death of Eleazar
Death of Eleazar
Jonathan and the temple of Dagon
Jonathan Destroying the Temple of Dagon
Heliodorus cast down
Heliodorus Cast Down
An army in the heavens
The Apparition of the Army in the Heavens
Death of Eleazar the scribe
Martyrdom of Eleazar the Scribe
The courage of a mother
Courage of a Mother
The punishment of Antiochus
The Punishment of Antiochus
An angel in gold armor
The Angel Sent to Deliver Israel
Judas Maccabeus
Judas Maccabeus Before the Army of Nicanor

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