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  2. Verbal dictation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verbal_dictation

    Verbal dictation. Verbal dictation describes a theory about how the Holy Spirit was involved with the people who first physically inscribed the Bible. According to this theory, the human role was a purely mechanical one: their individuality was by-passed whilst they wrote, and neither did their cultural background have any influence on what ...

  3. Indigenous religious beliefs of the Tagalog people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_religious...

    Bathala: the "almighty" or "creator". According to the early Spanish missionaries, the Tagalog people believed in a creator-god named Bathala, [2] whom they referred to both as maylicha (creator; lit. "actor of creation") and maycapal (lord, or almighty; lit. "actor of power"). Loarca and Chirino reported that in some places, this creator god ...

  4. Bible translations into the languages of the Philippines

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible_translations_into...

    Tagalog. Portions of the Bible were first translated by Spanish friars into the Philippine languages in the catechisms and prayer materials they produced. The Doctrina Cristiana (1593) was the first book published in the Tagalog baybayin script. Protestants published Ang Biblia (American Standard Version) in 1905 in Tagalog, based on the ...

  5. Christianity and politics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_and_politics

    Christianity. The relationship between Christianity and politics is a historically complex subject and a frequent source of disagreement throughout the history of Christianity, as well as in modern politics between the Christian right and Christian left. There have been a wide variety of ways in which thinkers have conceived of the relationship ...

  6. Ecclesiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecclesiology

    Christianity. In Christian theology, ecclesiology is the study of the Church, the origins of Christianity, its relationship to Jesus, its role in salvation, its polity, its discipline, its eschatology, and its leadership . In its early history, one of the Church's primary ecclesiological issues had to do with the status of Gentile members in ...

  7. Kritarchy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kritarchy

    Kritarchy, also called kritocracy, was the system of rule by Biblical judges ( שופטים, shoftim) in ancient Israel, started by Moses according to the Book of Exodus, [1] before the establishment of a united monarchy under Saul. [2] [3]

  8. Datu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datu

    t. e. A pre-colonial couple belonging to the datu or nobility as depicted in the Boxer Codex of the 16th century. Datu is a title which denotes the rulers (variously described in historical accounts as chiefs, sovereign princes, and monarchs) of numerous Indigenous peoples throughout the Philippine archipelago. [1]

  9. Book of Leviticus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Leviticus

    e. The Book of Leviticus ( / lɪˈvɪtɪkəs /, from Ancient Greek: Λευιτικόν, Leuïtikón; Biblical Hebrew: וַיִּקְרָא‎, Wayyīqrāʾ, 'And He called'; Latin: Liber Leviticus) is the third book of the Torah (the Pentateuch) and of the Old Testament, also known as the Third Book of Moses. [1] Many hypotheses presented by ...