Canon- an official list of books accepted as Holy
Scripture
Deuterocanonical- a term meaning “of the second canon”;
designate writings included in the Catholic Old Testament but not in the Hebrew
Bible. These scriptures are Tobit, Judith, 1 and 2 Maccabees, Wisdom, Sirach or
Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, and parts of Esther and Daniel
Apocrypha- a
Greek word that means “hidden,” this is
the name of a separate section in some Protestant Bibles that includes the
deuterocanonical books
Sin- an offense against God. A deliberate thought,
word, deed, or omission against the eternal law of God
Section
1:
Sacred Tradition- the living transmission of the Church’s
Gospel message found in the Church’s teaching, life, and worship. It is
faithfully preserved, handed on, and interpreted by the Church’s Magisterium
Magisterium- the teaching authority of the Church
concerning issues of faith and morals. Consists of the pope and the college of
bishops acting together
Pseudepigrapha- Ancient religious books from the same time frame
as the books of the Bible, especially the New Testament. The Church decided
these books do not belong among the inspired books of the Old and New
Testaments
Archaeology- the science of studying material remains of
past human life and activities
Artifacts- items created by past humans, usually for
a specific purpose (tools, pottery, clothing, etc.)
Salvation History- term used to describe God’s
presence and work throughout all of human history
Typology- the
study of prefigured patterns of divine activity. In Scripture study involves
reading the Old Testament in light of Christ crucified and risen
Critical Reading- a number of methods studying the
Bible that aim to discover what God is communicating, both to the people of
biblical times and to people today