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      • The word count – 788,280 is based on the KJV and seems to be almost exactly as we’d expect (see our page on How Many Words in the Bible for more information on this).
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  2. May 29, 2014 · The Bible is more than 600,000 words long in its original languages—but how long are the 66 individual books of the Bible?

  3. So immediately below is a sortable table, showing the number of chapters, verses and words in each book of the Bible. You can sort the table by clicking on any of the headings or search for words or word portions in the search box.

  4. iii. It is good to remember that what we have in Acts 2 is a small portion of what Peter actually said. Acts 2:40 tells us, And with many other words he testified and exhorted them. Like almost all the sermons recorded in the Bible, what we have is a Holy Spirit inspired abridgment of a longer message. c.

  5. Luke also shows how Jesus’ new family quickly faced hostility from the leaders of Jerusalem. With a beautifully symmetrical design in chapters 3-5, Luke tells a tale of two temples. God’s new temple, the community of Jesus’ followers, are gathering “every day in the temple courts and from house to house” (Acts 2:46, 5:42).

  6. To all who afar off, as many as the Lord will call THE RESULTS RECORDED BY LUKE (40-41) After Peter with many other words testified and exhorted them:"Be saved from this perverse generation" Those who gladly receive his word were baptized; That day about 3000 were added (cf. Ac 2:47) THE BEGINNING OF THE CHURCH (42-47)

  7. Luke. The book of Luke is another one of the earliest accounts of Jesus’ life, and it’s actually part 1 of a unified, two-volume work called Luke - Acts. If you compare the opening lines of both books, it’s clear that they come from the same author ( Luke 1:1-4 ; Acts 1:1-2 ). There are internal clues in Acts and also in early tradition ...

  8. Mar 14, 2024 · From Luke 1:1–4 and Acts 1:1–3, we know that the same author wrote both Luke and Acts. The tradition from the earliest days of the church has been that Luke , a companion of the apostle Paul, wrote the books of Luke and Acts (Colossians 4:14; 2 Timothy 4:11).

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