The study of the Old Testament is not as simple as some people think. To be able to remember the Bible story does not necessarily mean that you are comprehensively grasping the history of Israel and neighboring countries. Some people read and discuss the Bible without fully understanding the historical and social problems that have occurred at the time. It will be appreciated to the work in the Bible by connecting with the Bible's story and becoming able to fight some of the same problems faced by people in the Bible.
French Richard Simon (1638-1712) made such review of the Old Testament. His work "Critical History of the Old Testament" is the first book to treat the Bible as a literary work. He regards the Old Testament as historical material, but as time goes on, various writers are based on various motivations and interests than God's unification. "{21} His work had been condemned by many Christians, but scorpions were thrown away and others continued the same analysis.
Christian faith is written in the Bible. The Bible is divided into two parts, the Old Testament and the New Testament. The Old Testament can be divided into four groups: education, history, poetry, and prophecy. They showed that the Jews slowly understood what God was like. Christian believes that the Old Testament is looking forward to the arrival of Jesus. The New Testament consists of four Gospels. It has a story about Jesus and what happened in his life. Those who wrote these stories explained why they believed that Jesus was so important. Most Gospel is about the last week of Jesus' life, because the writer thinks this is the most important
Bible, Christian: Christian scriptures, including the Old Testament and the New Testament. The Old Testament consists of 39 books and is a further division of 24 books in the Hebrew Scriptures. The New Testament contains 27 books: The Four Gospels of Jesus' Lifetime, the Apostolic Diary, the Twenty - Circle, and the Apocalypse. The classic of the New Testament formally became officially in the letter of Atanas' Easter festival at 367 AD. It is worth noting that the Bible in the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church contains more books including pseudo-gins (Smith and Green 1995: 113).