Could anybody answer my question: What year was the 1st translation of the Bible made into Arabic?
I found on Wikipedia that the 1st translation was made in the 9th cen. I don't believe it.
We have the evidence from the Acts of the Apostles that Apostle Paul travelled to Arabia and preached the Gospel there.
I think that to evangelize Arabs Christian preachers in the 1st centuries used Arabic translations of the Old Testament. I guess they even translated the epistles of the Apostles into Arabic.
Unfortunatelly, I couldn't find on the Internet the proof that the Bible was translated into Arabic before the 9th century.
If anyone can give me the evidence that it was translated in the 1st centuries, please show me them.
Comments
Sorry for delay with answer.
I found the answer to my question in this book. The book confirms the information on Wikipedia. The Bible was translated in 8th cen in response for writing the Koran.
By the way I have another question that started bothering me not long ago. On YouTube & the Internet there are videos & articles that claim that Allah is the name of the Arabian Moon god. Even in one article I found the information that Christians started using the word "Allah" to denote the God Creator because of imposing by Muslims. That shocked me. I thought that the word "Allah" was an old word and was made by adding the article "al" + "ilya". I also found another version of derivation of this word: it was derived from Aramaic "Alaha".
On Wikipedia it is written that pre-Islamic Christian tombs contained the word "Allah".
Is there any proof in archaeological evidence or pre-Islamic parts of the Bible or messages of the clergy, that were translated into Arabic, that this word was used by Christians before coming of Islam?
I want to add that I found the following article: http://araborthodoxy.blogspot.ru/2009/11/word-allah.html about this issue. Till now I don't have any solid proof that Arab Christians before Islam had called God either "Allah" or with other word. But in this article I found an interesting thought: "all the words we have for God, whether it's God, Theos, Deus, Bog, or
what have you, all have pagan backgrounds and are used in modern times
to describe non-Christian gods". I consider that Allah was the supreme deity among Arabs, and to help them to understand the true God Christians used the word "Allah" to describe God Almighty. I think we have the similar example when Apostle Paul preached about the Unknown God to heathens. So for Christians Allah is not a name like for Muslims. It's just an appellative.
If you have any other ideas about my issue, please share with me )