Dictionary of the Bible

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The Editor's aim has been to provide a complete and independent Dictionary op the Bible ina single volume and abreast of present-day scholarship.1. Complete.—The Dictionary gives an account of all the contents of the Bible, the articlesbeing as numerous as in the largest dictionaries, but written to a different scale. The Index ofthe Dictionary of the Bible in five volumes by the same Editor has been taken as basis, and suchadditions made to it as the latest research has suggested. The persons, places, and importantevents in the Bible are described. There are articles on the Biblical theology and ethics, onthe antiquities, and on the languages—English as well as Hebrew and Greek. The books of theBible are carefully explained in their origin, authorship, and contents; and full account is takenof the results of literary criticism and archseological discovery.2. Independent.—The Dictionary is not a condensation of the five-volume Dictionary. It isnot based upon it or upon any other dictionary. It is a new and independent work. All the signed,and most of the unsigned, articles are written afresh, and (with few exceptions) by different authorsfrom those who treated the same subjects in the larger Dictionary. Even when the wording of thelarge Dictionary has been retained, as in the case, for example, of proper names of minorimportance, every statement has been verified anew. The single-volume Dictionary wiU thusbe found as fresh and full of life as the largest dictionaries are.3. In a single volume.—^This is to bring the contents of the Bible, in accordance with presentscholarship, within reach of those who have not the means to buy or the knowledge to use the Dictionaryin five volumes. This Dictionary contains no Hebrew or Greek except in transliteration.It is however, a large volume, and it would have been larger had not the utmost care been takento prevent overlapping. For the great subjects are not treated with that excessive brevity whichmakes single-volume dictionaries often so disappointing. The space has been so carefully husbandedthat it has been found possible to allow 24 pages to the article on Israel; 23 pages to thearticle on Jesus Christ; and half that number to a further article on the Person or Christ.There is another way in which space has been saved. The whole subject of Magic Divination andSorcery for example, has been dealt with in a single article. That article includes manysub-topics each of which is found in its own place, with a cross-reference to this comprehensivearticle- and when the word occurs in this article it is printed in black type, so that no time maybe lost in searching for it.4. Abreast of present Scholarship.—That is to say, of the average scholarship of its day. Thereare many reasons why a Dictionary of the Bible should not take up an extreme position on eitherside But the reason which has proved to be most conclusive, is the impossibility of getting thewhole of the work done satisfactorily by either very advanced or very conservative scholars.They are not numerous enough. And there could be no satisfaction in entrusting work to menwho were chosen for any other reason than their knowledge of the subject.
LF/124769/R
Data sheet
- Name of the Author
- 1852-1922
Hastings
James - Language
- English
- Release date
- 1909