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For the record... Catholics DO have their own bible. The Catholic bible has more books in it than the generally accepted bibles. I buy a bible in the book store, it will be different than the bible that my son brought home in his elementary catholic school.
Oh!

Well, that's not what I understood was being said. I thought it was a translation that was being referred to.
To be exactly accurate, the Catholic Church does not have its own Bible. It has the bible, which consists of a collection of documents deemed without doubt to be worthy of regard as Holy Scipture.
At the time of the Reformation, the newly emerging Protestant sects, breaking away from the Church of the 1500 years since Jesus, rejected some of those documents in full and others in part, and so their
version of the Bible is more limited and doesn't contain all of Daniel.
The books contained in the full Bible are Tobias, Judith, Wisdom, Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, First and Second Maccabees - and parts of Esther (10:14 to 16:14) and Daniel (3:24- 90; 13; 14). Some Episcopalian churches do recognise these books as Scriptural but publish them separately in the Apocrypha. They don't say they are false. They say there is some doubt as to whether or not they are all true.
Some of the doctrines, such as purgatory and praying for the dead, that Protestants accuse the Catholic Church of inventing are in fact very ancient, and to be found in those books missing from the newer Protestant Bibles. (Sorry, Paul, when I started writing this post I hadn't realised you had already addressed it, but anyway, this fills in more of the detail.)
The oldest Christian Bible known contains the full Bible, not the expurgated one.
Tammy, please feel free not to answer this if you don't want to, but your statement contained one curious fact. Given the nature of your beliefs, why did you send your son to a Catholic school? You say an elementary school, so he was in his most formative period