Bible sales in the United Kingdom reached their highest-ever level in 2025, while in the United States they hit a 21-year ...
Early Christian art often shows Jesus holding what looks like a wand. Modern viewers assume magic, but ancient audiences saw ...
The total sales of UK Bible sales reached £6.3 million, more than doubling in value since 2019. The overall number of ...
Josh Sears, an associate professor of ancient scripture at Brigham Young University, recently spoke with Church News about ...
A display from The St. John’s Bible, a hand-crafted, illuminated manuscript created by a team of artists and calligraphers, now on view year-round at St. John’s University in Collegeville.
A landmark new volume from the National Gallery is set to unite two of the greatest cultural achievements in Western history: the King James Bible and the masterpieces of European painting. The Art of ...
The Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary A Reflection for the Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Blessed are you, holy Virgin Mary, deserving of all praise; from you rose the ...
14 x 10.5 in. (35.6 x 26.7 cm.) Subscribe now to view details for this work, and gain access to over 18 million auction results. Purchase One-Day Pass ...
An exceedingly rare 15th-century print of Christ on the eve of his crucifixion—once affixed inside The Huntington’s copy of the Gutenberg Bible—was for sale in London. Would he be interested? Tabor ...
A Gutenberg Bible owned by the Huntington Library, in San Marino, California, has enjoyed some exciting exploits in its 600-year history. It’s been owned by Silesian nobles, traded by a Scottish ...
The ink that blacked out the faces of a Japanese American woman and the sleeping toddler in her arms was the kind of hateful vandalism seemingly aimed at defacing not just public art but history ...
Recovering the lost art of Scripture memorization. When was the last time you memorized passages from Scripture? It might have been when you were in eighth grade, preparing for confirmation. Or maybe ...