43. Bible
See also 53. BOOKS ; 69. CATHOLICISM ; 80. CHRISTIANITY ; 183. GOD and GODS ; 203. HELL ; 205. HERESY ; 231. JUDAISM ; 332. PROTESTANTISM ; 349. RELIGION ; 392. THEOLOGY .
- apocrypha
- 1 . religious writings of disputed origin, regarded by many author-ities as uncanonical.
- 2 . (capitalized) a group of 15 books, not part of the canonical Hebrew Bible, but present in the Septuagint and Vulgate and hence accepted by some as biblical. — apocryphal , adj.
- biblicism
- a strict following of the teachings of the Bible.
- biblicist
- 1. an expert in biblical text and exegesis.
- 2 . a person who strictly follows the teachings of the Bible.
- biblioclasm
- the destruction of books, especially the Bible. — biblioclast , n.
- bibliolater, bibliolatrist
- a person who respects the Bible excessively and interprets it literally.
- bibliomancy
- a form of divination using books, especially the Bible, in which passages are chosen at random and the future foretold from them.
- dittology
- a doublé reading or interpretation, especially of a Bible passage.
- eisegesis
- the introduction by an interpreter of his own ideas into a text under explication.
- Elohist
- the author of part of the first six books in the Old Testament, so named because of references to God as Elohim. Cf. Yahwist.
- exegesis
- critical explication or interpretation of Scripture.
- exegetics
- the branch of theology that specializes in interpretation, or exegesis, of Biblical literature. Historically, exegetes have recognized four levels of meaning in the Bible: the historical or literal, the allegorical, the moral, and the anagogical or mystical, putting emphasis on the necessity of a foundation for the latter three in the literal sense. — exegete, n.
- exegetist, exegist
- an exegete; one skilled in exegesis.
- fundamentalism
- the rationale of conservative American Protestants who regard the Bible as free of errors or contradictions and emphasize its literal interpretation, usually without reference to modern scholarship. Also called literalism . — fundamentalist, n., adj.
- hermeneutics
- the science of interpretation and explanation, especially the branch of theology that deals with the general principles of Biblical interpretation. — hermeneut, hermeneutist, n.
- Higher Criticism
- the analysis of Biblical materials that aims to ascertain, from internal evidence, authorship, date, and intent. Cf. Lower Criticism.
- Hutchinsonianism
- 1. the theories of John Hutchinson, an 18th-century Yorkshireman, who disputed Newton’s theory of gravitation and maintained that a system of natural science was to be found in the Old Testament.
- 2. the tenets of the followers of Mrs. Anne Hutchinson, an antinomian who lived in the early days of the Massachusetts Colony. — Hutchinsonian, adj.
- inspirationism
- the belief in inspiration arising from the Scriptures. — inspirationist, n. — inspirative, adj.
- isagogics
- a branch of theology that is introductory to actual exegesis, empha-sizing the literary and cultural history of Biblical writings. — isagogic, adj.
- lection
- a reading from a text, especially a reading from the Bible as part of a church service.
- lectionary
- a list of the lections, or texts, to be read in church services through-out the canonical year.
- literalism
- 1. fundamentalism.
- 2. Scripturalism. — literalist, n., adj.
- Lower Criticism
- the study of Biblical materials that intends to reconstruct their original texts in preparation for the tasks of Higher Criticism. Cf. Higher Criticism.
- pseudepigrapha
- the spurious writings (other than the canonical books and the Apocrypha) professing to be biblical in character, as the Books of Enoch. — pseudepigraphic, pseudepigraphical, pseudepigraphous, adj.
- Scripturalism
- a strict compliance with the literal interpretation of the Bible. Also called literalism.
- synoptist
- a Biblical scholar who arranges side-by-side excerpts from the first three Gospels to show their resemblances in event, chronology, and language. — synoptic, adj.
- Targumist
- 1. the writer of a Targum, a translation or paraphrase into Aramaic of a portion of the Old Testament.
- 2. an authority on Targumic literature. — Targumic, Targumistic, adj.
- textualism
- the practice of adhering strictly to the Scriptures. — textualist, textuary, n.
- textuary
- a textualist.
- tropist
- a person who explains the Scriptures in terms of tropes, or figures of speech.
- tropology
- a method of interpreting biblical literature emphasizing the moral implications of the tropes, or figures of speech, used in its composition. — tropological, adj.
- typology
- the analysis of symbolism, especially of the meaning of Scripture types. — typologist, n. — typological, adj.
- Yahwist
- the author of part of the first six books in the Old Testament, so named because of numerous references therein to God as Yahweh (Jehovah). Cf. Elohist.
