**ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA **
**The Encyclopaedia Britannica, states ****“The Septuagint has four (divisions): law, history, poetry, and prophets, with the books of the Apocrypha inserted where appropriate.” **
**also states, **
"The Christian Church received its Bible from Greek-speaking Jews and found the majority of its early converts in the Hellenistic world. The Greek Bible of Alexandria thus became the official Bible of the Christian community, and the overwhelming number of quotations from the Hebrew Scriptures in the New Testament are derived from it…"
Context :
**The Septuagint, which means seventy, ( LXX ) is the Greek translation of the Old Testament which was completed in Alexandria, Egypt in about 100 BC. It was begun by a group of seventy-two Hebrew scholars from Jerusalem that were sent to Alexandria to provide the Jews of the Dispersion with a copy of the scriptures in their language. (Since Alexander the Great had conquered the known world of his day, they spoke primarily Greek.)
**
**There are approximately 350 quotations in the New Testament of the Old Testament. Of these 350 quotations **300 come from the Greek Septuagint. It was the Old Testament Bible of the first century Christians. Jesus quoted from it. The Septuagint included the Deuterocanonical books ****which Protestants call the “Apocrypha.”
**The Jews in Ethiopia to this day still follow the same identical canon which is found in the Catholic Old Testament which includes these seven Deuterocanonical books (cf. Encyclopedia Judaica, vol. 6, p. 1147).
**
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THE BOOKS OF THE BIBLE
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