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CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Inspiration of the Bible
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Inspiration of the Bible tt=96
The subject will be treated in this article under the four heads: I. Belief in Inspired books; II. Nature of Inspiration; III. Extent of Inspiration; IV. Protestant Views on the Inspiration of the Bible.
Belief in inspired books
Among the Jews
The belief in the sacred character of certain books is as old as the Hebrew literature . Moses and the prophets had committed to writing a part of the message they were to deliver to Israel from God . Now the naby (prophet), whether he spoke or wrote, was considered by the Hebrews the authorized interpreter of the thoughts and wishes of Yahweh . He was called, likewise, "the man of God ," "the man of the Spirit " ( Hosea 9:7 ). It was around the Temple and the Book that the religious and national restoration of the Jewish people was effected after their exile (see 2 Maccabees 2:13-14 , and the prologue of Sirach in the Septuagint ). Philo (from 20 B.C. to A.D. 40) speaks of the "sacred books", "sacred word", and of "most holy scripture " (De vita Moysis , iii, no. 23). The testimony of Flavius Josephus (A.D. 37-95) is still more characteristic; it is in his writings that the word inspiration ( epipnoia ) is met for the first "
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