One of the major festivals of Westerners - Christmas is to commemorate the birth of Jesus Christ. In December of each year, Westerners are busy preparing Christmas Day, although now there is much more religious atmosphere, Christmas is unpredictable. As a Christianity in the world's most influential religion, its influence is far exceeding its national greece and Hebrew nation, it is necessary to pay attention to the church of Christianism - "Bible" (the Bible " Bible).
The Bible is not a book written by someone, but a series of related classics, with a total of sixty-six. The first thirty-nine is called "Old Testament", which is completed in the first thousand years of BC, and it is Hebrew. The last twenty-seventh is called "New Testament", mainly written in Greek, and the book is about more than 100 years. The "Bible" narrates the history of Hebrew nation and also reflects their religious beliefs. The Bible has become a valuable heritage of human beings because of their boundaries of the national and nation since its influence. Like the "Old Testament", God created human, Moses from Egypt; "Savior" in "New Testament" (Christ) is born to save human beings, etc., all spread throughout the world, become old The story of young families, the agencies, painters, and sculptors. Christianity is introduced to the United Kingdom by San Augustine, 597 AD. Since then, the British has a lot of the most grand festival: Christmas and the most authoritative Religious Holy Society: Bible. That is to say, with the introduction of Christianity, the English translation of the Bible has not been discontinued, and the current English version of the Bible is the bottom of 1603. Before and after the entire translation process, many Bible idioms have entered everyday English.
For example: a dead doG waste or worthless thing;
Judas "KISS Judah's kiss (shameful selling);
Let the dead bury their dead. I don't even defend;
Out-Herod Herod is more than Herod to Herod (there is no one); the apple of one "s eye palm pars;
Wolf in Sheep "S Clothing Wolf in Sheepskin;
Eye for Eye, Tooth for Tooth Eye eye, with teeth;
Wash one "s Hands of a Thing washing hands;
New Wine In Old Bottles Old bottled new wine, etc., becoming an indispensable part of English culture