Where We Got the Bible: Our Debt to the Catholic Church

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This little book about the Bible grew out of lectures which the author delivered on the subject to mixed audiences. There is no pretense of scholarship or of eloquent language; all that is attempted is an accurate exposition along the familiar lines of the Catholic claim historically in regard to the Bible. Bishop Grey Graham was parish priest of Holy Cross, Glasgow. Marked by a deep personal piety, he was a model pastor, who had dedicated his life to the preaching of the Gospel in season and out of season.

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Tim Drake says:

The Bible didn’t fall from Heaven. Discover its origins! Reverend Henry G. Graham provides a compelling examination of Scripture and how it came to be as we now know it. The picture that emerges is that while divinely inspired it is the work of human tradition.This excellent resource explains how the Church compiled the New Testament Canon, the work of the Monks of the early Church, refutes the Protestant argument of the “Bible alone”, and explains some of the erroneous Protestant versions of the Bible.The book also…

researcher says:

Where We Got The Bible: Our Debt to the Catholic Church I read this book years ago, liked it a lot, and then loaned it to someone from whom I couldn’t get it back. Apparently, he liked it so much he wanted to keep it. So I bought two more copies, one for me and one for someone else. I have recommended it to others who are interested in Sacred Scripture and the real story behind it. According to Karl Keating, the former President of Catholic Answers, it apparently never went out of publication since its original publication in 1911, testifying…

Anonymous says:

This is a great book about the history of the Bible. It’s interesting to hear how the Sacred Scriptures became the Bible. You wouldn’t know unless you read it that Christians died for the Scriptures, monks spent their entire lives writing down the Sacred pages and that they were preserved and passed down over time throughout Christian history. Graham writes with a bit of a Catholic bias because he lived in Scotland, where Catholicism was once illegal and he had converted. However, the book is…

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