Catholicism For Dummies. Rev. Kenneth Brighenti

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word and the spoken word of God are not in competition with one another, nor do Catholics believe one at the expense of the other. Rather, the written word and the spoken word have a mutual partnership. Whenever and wherever the Bible is silent on an issue or its meaning is ambiguous or disputed, the spoken word (Sacred Tradition) steps in to clarify the matter. Catholics believe that God’s word reflects what’s in His mind, and because God is all truth and all good, His word conveys truth and goodness. Catholics have deep respect for and devotion to the Word of God.

      Faith in the written word: The Bible

      Catholicism is a biblical religion. Like all Christian religions, it cherishes the Bible as the inspired, infallible, inerrant, and revealed Word of God. Having faith in the following aspects of the Bible is crucial to being Catholic:

       The belief in the Bible as one of the two channels of revelation

       The literal and figurative interpretation of the biblical text

       The belief in the Catholic Bible as the most authoritative text

      Believing in two forms of revelation

      Catholic Christianity and Eastern Orthodox Christianity believe in one common source of divine revelation (God Himself), but they believe the revelation is transmitted to us through two equal and distinct modes: the written word (the Bible) and the spoken word (the unwritten word). Protestant Christianity regards the Bible as the only source of divine revelation. Another way of looking at it is to think of some Christians as seeing only one channel of revelation — sola scriptura, which is Latin for “Scripture alone” and Catholic Christians as seeing two channels of revelation — both the written word and the unwritten word of God. (Just divert thine eyes to the later section “Faith in the spoken word: Sacred Tradition” for an explanation of what the unwritten word is.)

      Interpreting sacred literature both literally and figuratively

      Catholics regard the Bible as the inspired and revealed Word of God, but it’s also seen as a collection of sacred literature. Rather than just looking at the Bible as one big book, Catholicism treats the Bible as a collection of smaller books under one cover: the Word of God written by men yet inspired by God. Since the time of the Reformation, opinion on the interpretation of the sacred text has differed significantly. Some Christians hold for a literal interpretation of every word and phrase of Scripture; other Christians hold for a faithful interpretation, which is sometimes literal and sometimes not. (In other words, some text is meant to be interpreted figuratively.) Catholics belong to the second camp.

      The Bible tells the history of salvation, but it’s much more than a history book. It contains the Psalms of David — songs that the king wrote in honor of God — yet the Bible is much more than a hymnal. It contains poetry, prose, history, theology, imagery, metaphor, analogy, irony, hyperbole, and so on. Because it’s not exclusively one form of literature, as you would have in a science textbook, one needs to know and appreciate the various literary forms in the Bible in order to interpret it as the author intended.

      BIBLE TRIVIA

      Want a few interesting Bible tidbits? You got it.

      The word bible isn’t even in the Bible. Do a word search on your computer, and you’ll see that nowhere from Genesis to the Apocalypse (Revelation) is the word bible ever mentioned. But the word Scripture appears 53 times in the King James Version of the Bible, and the phrase Word of God appears 55 times. So if the word itself isn’t in the Bible, why call it the Bible? The word comes from the Greek biblia, meaning “a collection of books,” and the origin goes back even farther to the word biblos, meaning “papyrus.” In ancient times, the paper from trees to write on didn’t exist — only stone or papyrus. Imagine — stone books.

      Trusting the authority of the Catholic Bible

      What follows is a snapshot of how the Bible was created and how different versions evolved — the Catholic versions and the Protestant versions. If you’re eager for more information on the Bible, however, check out The Bible For Dummies by Jeffrey Geoghegan and Michael Homan (Wiley).

      To understand the history of the Bible, you really have to go back to around 1800 B.c. when the oral tradition of the Hebrew people started, because Abraham and his tribes were nomadic people and didn’t have a written language of their own. Mothers and fathers verbally (orally) handed down the stories of the Old Testament about Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel, and so on. (The Latin word traditio means “to hand down,” and it’s the root of the English word for tradition.) The stories of the Old Testament were all told by word of mouth, which we call oral tradition.

      Moses appeared sometime around 1250 B.c., when God delivered the Hebrew people from the bondage of slavery in Egypt,

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