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Glossary›Bible

Glossary

Bible

The sacred scriptures of Christianity and Judaism, comprising the Old Testament (Hebrew Bible) and, for Christians, the New Testament.

What is the Bible?

The Bible is the foundational sacred text of Christianity and Judaism, comprising a collection of ancient writings composed over approximately 1,000 years. For Jews, the Bible consists of the Hebrew Scriptures (Tanakh), organized into three sections: Torah (Law), Nevi’im (Prophets), and Ketuvim (Writings). For Christians, the Bible includes both the Old Testament (corresponding largely to the Hebrew Bible) and the New Testament, which chronicles the life and teachings of Jesus Christ and the early Christian movement. The Bible meaning extends beyond historical record—it functions as theological guide, liturgical foundation, moral compass, and devotional text for billions of practitioners worldwide.

Origins & Lineage

The Hebrew Bible was composed between approximately 1200 BCE and 100 BCE, with the Torah traditionally attributed to Moses (though modern scholarship dates its final compilation to the 5th century BCE). The Prophetic books emerged between the 8th and 5th centuries BCE, while the Writings (including Psalms, Proverbs, and later texts like Daniel) were finalized by the 2nd century BCE. The Septuagint, a Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures produced in Alexandria between 300-200 BCE, became the basis for the Christian Old Testament.

The New Testament was written between approximately 50-110 CE in Koine Greek. The earliest texts are Paul’s epistles (c. 50-60 CE), followed by the Gospels—Mark (c. 70 CE), Matthew and Luke (c. 80-90 CE), and John (c. 90-110 CE)—along with Acts, additional epistles, and Revelation. The Christian biblical canon was largely settled by the 4th century CE, formalized at councils including Hippo (393 CE) and Carthage (397 CE), though different Christian traditions maintain slightly different canons.

Key figures in biblical interpretation include Jerome (c. 347-420 CE), who produced the Latin Vulgate translation; Martin Luther (1483-1546), whose German translation catalyzed the Protestant Reformation; and the King James translators (1611), whose English version profoundly shaped anglophone Christianity. Jewish interpretation developed through the Talmud (compiled 200-500 CE) and later rabbinic commentaries by scholars including Rashi (1040-1105) and Maimonides (1138-1204).

How It’s Practiced

Bible engagement takes multiple forms across traditions. In Judaism, Torah study (often in hevruta pairs) forms the core of religious education, with weekly portions (parashat hashavua) read publicly on Sabbath. Psalms are central to Jewish liturgy, while rabbinic commentary traditions like midrash explore deeper meanings through interpretive storytelling.

Christian practice centers on both private devotional reading and communal proclamation. Lectio divina, a contemplative reading practice formalized by Benedict of Nursia (c. 480-547), involves slow, meditative engagement with short passages through four movements: lectio (reading), meditatio (meditation), oratio (prayer), and contemplatio (contemplation). Protestant traditions emphasize personal Bible study, often using concordances and commentaries, while Catholic and Orthodox traditions integrate biblical readings into elaborate liturgical cycles.

Monastic communities structure daily life around the Liturgy of the Hours, reciting biblical passages—especially Psalms—at fixed times. Evangelical and Pentecostal communities emphasize memorization, verse-by-verse preaching, and application to daily life. Many practitioners maintain daily devotional practices combining biblical reading with prayer journaling.

The Bible Today

Contemporary seekers encounter the Bible through diverse channels. Academic biblical studies programs at universities offer historical-critical analysis, examining archaeological evidence, literary forms, and cultural contexts. Seminary programs train clergy in exegesis (interpretation) and homiletics (preaching). Popular Bible study groups meet in churches, homes, and increasingly online, using curricula from publishers like InterVarsity Press, NavPress, and Zondervan.

Retreat centers offer immersive biblical experiences—Christian retreat houses provide silent contemplative retreats incorporating lectio divina, while Jewish organizations host text study intensives exploring Torah and Talmud. Digital platforms including YouVersion, Bible Gateway, and Sefaria provide free access to multiple translations with study tools. Audio Bibles narrated by actors have gained popularity for contemplative listening.

Interfaith dialogue increasingly examines shared biblical heritage, particularly Genesis and the Prophets common to Jewish and Christian canons. Liberation theology movements in Latin America, Black theology in the United States, and feminist biblical scholarship have generated new interpretive frameworks emphasizing social justice themes.

Common Misconceptions

The Bible is not a single book but an anthology of diverse literary genres—law codes, poetry, prophecy, letters, apocalyptic visions, and narrative history—composed by multiple authors across centuries. It was not written in English; the original languages were primarily Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, making translation itself an interpretive act.

The Bible is not scientifically or historically inerrant in a modern sense; it reflects ancient Near Eastern cosmology and historiographic conventions different from contemporary standards. Different Christian denominations maintain different canons—Catholic and Orthodox Bibles include deuterocanonical books (the Apocrypha) that Protestant Bibles exclude.

Bible study is not exclusively literal; Jewish and Christian traditions have cultivated sophisticated allegorical, typological, and mystical reading practices for millennia. The text does not provide simple, unambiguous answers to contemporary ethical questions; interpretation requires engagement with context, genre, and tradition.

How to Begin

For beginners exploring what is Bible, start with narrative portions: Genesis 1-12 (creation and patriarchal stories), Exodus 1-20 (liberation from Egypt and Ten Commandments), or one complete Gospel (Mark is shortest). The Book of Psalms offers accessible poetry suitable for contemplative reading.

Secure a readable modern translation—the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) and Jewish Publication Society (JPS) Tanakh balance scholarly accuracy with clarity. The Common English Bible (CEB) and New Living Translation (NLT) prioritize accessibility. Consider a study Bible with introductory essays and notes, such as the HarperCollins Study Bible or the Jewish Study Bible.

Begin with lectio divina: select a short passage (3-10 verses), read slowly multiple times, notice what resonates, respond in prayer or journaling, and rest in silence. Alternatively, join a study group—many congregations welcome beginners regardless of religious affiliation. Online courses from Yale’s Open Yale Courses or Harvard’s HarvardX offer academic introductions to biblical literature.

For Jewish approaches, explore Sefaria.org for Hebrew-English texts with classical commentaries. For Christian contemplative practice, read “Too Deep for Words” by Thelma Hall or “Sacred Reading” by Michael Casey. Remember that the Bible for beginners is best approached humbly, recognizing its complexity and the centuries of wisdom traditions that surround it.

Related terms

lectio divinachristianitytorahhebrew prayergospelgregorian chant
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