herm FINAL! textual criticism, biblical theology, & herm intro

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Last updated 8:05 PM on 5/2/26
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77 Terms

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Authorially Intended Meaning

The lesson that the author wants the reader to learn.

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Authoritative

The commanding presence seen in scripture, calling believers to obedience. The Biblical text and it's message is to be heeded.

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Big Question

The problem of dilemma that the book is addressing

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Deduction

Understanding a book or part of a book by focusing on its big picture or general categories.

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Effective History

The history of interpretations that influenced later readers.

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Eisegesis

Interpreting by inserting an outside meaning into a Biblical text.

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Exegesis

Interpreting by drawing out the meaning from a Biblical text.

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General Revelation

Revelation that is available to all people in all generations that proves unable to draw men to salvation.

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Historiography

The writings of human historical events into a meaningful text that interprets the events it describes.

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Illumination

The work of the Holy Spirit to help Biblical readers understand, interpret, and follow the text's message.

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Induction

Understanding a book or part of a book by focusing on its details and particulars.

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Inerrant

The Biblical text is without error.

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Infallible

The Biblical text will not lead the reader astray.

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Inference

A conclusion drawn by a reader based on evidence and reasoning.

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Inspiration

God's superintending activity to ensure that the writing of the Biblical text reflects His voice and His character. It makes the text both human and divine.

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Linguistics

The study of languages and its structures with subdisciplines including morphology, phonology, semantics, grammar, and syntax.

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Main Message

THe primary lesson that the author intends for the reader that resolves the big question of primary problem the book addresses.

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Mimesis

The process whereby an author can mimic or represent his experienced reality, even his perception and interpretation of what was, in a particular medium, such as a book, to a reader.

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Mimesis 1

A person experiences an event and (unconsciously) records it into his memory (from the event to memory).

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Mimesis 2

A person takes an event from his memory and consciously and deliberately records it into his book (from memory to text).

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Mimesis 3

Another person consciously and deliberately reads the text and (unconsciously) records the event into his own memory (from text to memory)

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Perspective

A person's point of view towards life and experience that shows up in how they understand reality especially in all three phases of mimesis.

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Philology

A precursor to the science of linguistics that uses painstaking textual analysis of (primarily) old written texts.

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Reader Response

An interpretive approach that grants the reader to define the meaning of the text being read. An aspect of interpretation.

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Special Revelation

Direct revelation of God that is needed to find life with God by grace through faith primarily through encountering God's word or in encountering God's saving events.

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Sufficient

The Biblical text and its message is capable of communicating how to worship God in any and every situation.

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Textual Outline

An organized presentation of a book's message that divides the text into major and minor units, following the design of the text's surface structure, and helps a reader discover it's message.

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Textual Argument

A synthesis of how the parts of a text work together to create meaning by how the juxtaposed big parts relate to each other to advances the book's message from its problem and solution

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Textual Spine

The significant repetitions at the beginning and ending a book that create a conversation and comparison of the most important aspects of the book, especially drawing the reader to its problem and solution

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Textual Strings

Significant repetitions within and across a book or its parts that create a conversation and comparison of different sections of the book

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Alexandrian manuscripts

the greek manuscripts that come from the dessert parts of Egypt; there are few of these mansuscripts; they are the oldest manuscripts; they are shorter manuscripts

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byzantine manuscripts

the greek manuscripts that come from the estern Roman empire; there are many of these mansuscripts; they are newer manuscripts; they are longer manuscripts

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canonical

a canonical book is a book that is included in the biblical canon; a canonical book has a canonical form or shape to it when it became a part of the

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canonization

the process of a biblical book becoming a part of the biblical canon

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composition (phase in making a biblical book)

the making of a whole coherent and cohesive book with a particular beginning, middle, and ending by how an author selects, adapts, and arranges his material to provide his perspective and message

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dead sea scrolls

the oldest ancient Hebrew manuscripts of the OT discovered in 1947 in caves; it preseves a consonantal text that affirms the Masoretic Texts and the Hebrew behind the Septuagint

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external text critical information

data about a biblical manuscript's location, condition, scribe, scribal habits, and family of manuscripts

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internal text critical information

data about the actual words and letters of a biblical manuscript

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lower criticism

another name for textual criticism

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manuscript

an ancient handwritten text of a biblical book or part of a biblical book

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masoretic text

the OT manuscript family preserved by the Masoretes

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miniscule manuscript

these are greek manuscipts that include lower case letters and were copied later than the original uncial manuscripts

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reading of a text

the way a particular manuscipt or manuscript family preserves a specific section of a text that in some way differs from other manuscipts

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textual criticism

seeks to determine the ORIGINAL form of a biblical text

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textual family

a grouping of common and historically connected mansuscripts that share traits and reflect similar readings between them

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the aramaic targums

ancient Jewish commentaries on the OT written in Aramaic that preserve readings of the OT older than the NT

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the canon

the books included in the Bible, OT and NT

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the septuagint

the ancient greek translation of the OT that is one of the main witnesses to the orignal, canonical, or earliest possible form of the OT

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the syriac peshitta

an ancient syriac translation of the OT and NT for use in ancient Syriac churches

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the vulgate

an ancient latin translation of the OT and NT by Jerome that become the main Bible in the western church; it preserves OT readings from the MT and LXX

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transmission history

the history of how a biblical book was transmitted over time

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uncial manuscript

the oldest greek manuscripts written in all capital letters with no spacing between words and without any punctuation

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variant readings

different readings of a biblical text during the text's consolidation that textual criticism evaluates

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Term

Simple Class Definition

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Biblical Theology

Seeks the authorially intended message of a Biblical book as part of the canon

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Covenant

A binding agreement between God and man or between two people that seals a relationship.

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Covenant Theology

Explains the Bible's message through the continuity of its covenants with each Biblical covenant reflecting the covenants of work and grace between God and man; it emphasizes continuity between Israel and the Church; it divides the law codes into moral, civil, and ceremonial with the church under its moral aspect.

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Dispensationalism

Explains the Bible's message through the discontinuity of the covenants with each new covenant forming a distinct test of a person or group of people or all of humanity to show that man is in constant need of God's grace; it emphasizes a distinction between Israel and the church; the MC's law codes do not apply to the church.

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Federal Theology

Another name for covenant theology, which explains the Bible's message through the continuity of its covenants with each Biblical covenant reflecting the covenant of redemption (within God) and the covenants of work and grace between God and man; it emphasizes continuity between Israel and the Church; it divides the law codes into moral, civil, and ceremonial with the church under its moral aspect.

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New Covenant Theology

A compromise between covenant theology and dispensationalism that does not divide the law codes into moral, civil, and ceremonial

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Progressive Covenantalism

A reformed baptist compromise between covenant theology and dispensationalism that emphasizes the covenants as a guide through the Old Testament, giving the Old Testament time to speak on its own terms; Old Testament connects to the New Testament through typology

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Progressive Dispensationalism

A compromise between covenant theology and dispensationalism that sees overlap between dispensationalism's emphasis on two people of God and in the covenants themselves.

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Progressive Revelation

God reveals Himself over time rather than all at once.

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Systematic Theology

Seeks an answer to a particular topic or question based upon reading the whole canon synchronically and the church's interpretations synchronically, being organized by key doctrines (man, God, and the cross), so that the church may proclaim and practice rightly.

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The Book of Acts

The fifth book of the New Testament canon is a narrative that outlines how God's Spirit acted in the early church and that teaches how to wait for God's kingdom to come.

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The Book of Revelation

The last book of the New Testament canon is an apocalyptic epistle that commands its readers to meditate on the Torah while waiting for God's kingdom to come.

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The Epistles

The letters of the New Testament

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The Former Prophets

The first half of the Prophets, which is the second part of the OT; it contains prophetic narratives of Israel's time in Canaan; Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings.

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The Gospels

The four NT books that narrate the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.

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The Prophets

The second part of the Old Testament; it is one book unto itself; it divides into the Former Prophets (the story of Israel's time in the land of Canaan) and the Latter Prophets (prophectic reflections on this time in light of the Torah)

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The Writings

The third part of the Old Testament; it is one book unto itself; it includes Psalms, Job, Proverbs, Ruth, Song of Songs, Ecclesiastes, Lamentations, Esther, Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Chronicles.

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The Torah

The first part of the OT; it is one book unto itself; it contains five "books": Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.

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The Synoptic Gospels

The synoptic gospels are Matthew, Mark, and Luke; they share a lot of common material.

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The Latter Prophets

The second half of the prophets, which is the second part of the Old Testament; it contains most of the prophetic (genre) books; Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the Twelve.

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Orthopraxy

Right practice

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Orthodoxy

Right doctrine

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Historical Theology

Seeks an answer to how the church has understood, proclaimed, and practiced the Scriptures and its doctrines over different periods of time so that church may proclaim and practice rightly.