
audiobook
The Bible; Its Origin, History, and Place in the World
How, When, and Why Written
Original Writings and Translations
Printing and the Bible
The Bible in Native Tongues
Burning of Bibles
The Word Not Bound
The Bible to All the World
The Value Of Bible Study
Bible Readings; Their Value and Use
The opening chapters trace the Bible’s beginnings, presenting it as a unique source of insight that has answered humanity’s deepest questions across ages. It explains how sacred writers, moved by the Spirit, recorded divine messages after the flood, leading to a continuous tradition that culminated with Christ and the apostles, completing the scriptural record. The narrative highlights the original Hebrew and Greek compositions and the early efforts to render them into other languages, such as the Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate.
The book then follows the remarkable journey of the Bible into the printing age, showing how Gutenberg’s press and later reformers made the text widely available. It describes the bold work of translators like Wyclif, whose English version broke the monopoly of clerical reading and opened the scriptures to ordinary people. By detailing these milestones, the work invites listeners to appreciate how a text once confined to scrolls became a global source of spiritual guidance.
Language
en
Duration
~23 hours (1369K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2010-11-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

by Order of the Eastern Star. General Grand Chapter

by John Gibson Paton

by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps

by Henry Adams

by John Henry Newman

by Stephen Charnock

by S. O. Susag

by Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Jr. Joseph Smith