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- Verbal_dictation abstract "Verbal dictation describes a theory about how the Holy Spirit was involved with the people who first physically indited 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 they wrote, because these writers were under the control of God. This may have been the original understanding of inspiration for the people of the Bible.According to James Barr this theory of inspiration was popular among Protestant theologians during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. According to Frederic Farrar, Martin Luther did not understand inspiration to mean that scripture was dictated in a purely mechanical manner. Instead, Luther "held that they were not dictated by the Holy Spirit, but that His illumination produced in the minds of their writers the knowledge of salvation, so that divine truth had been expressed in human form, and the knowledge of God had become a personal possession of man. The actual writing was a human not a supernatural act." Farrar says that John Calvin also rejected the verbal dictation theory. Today, according to T.D. Lea and H.P. Griffen, "[n]o respected Evangelicals maintain that God dictated the words of Scripture."".
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageExternalLink books?id=ZFCoSSKTffcC&pg=PA68.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageID "12125305".
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageLength "2753".
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageOutDegree "10".
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageRevisionID "574614963".
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink Bible.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink Biblical_inspiration.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Christian_theology_of_the_Bible.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink Evangelical.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink Evangelicalism.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink Frederic_Farrar.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink Holy_Spirit.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink James_Barr_(biblical_scholar).
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink John_Calvin.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink Martin_Luther.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLink Protestantism.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dictation theory".
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLinkText "dictated".
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLinkText "dictation theory".
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageWikiLinkText "verbally dictated".
- Verbal_dictation hasPhotoCollection Verbal_dictation.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Christian-theology-stub.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Verbal_dictation wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Rp.
- Verbal_dictation subject Category:Christian_theology_of_the_Bible.
- Verbal_dictation type Article.
- Verbal_dictation type Article.
- Verbal_dictation comment "Verbal dictation describes a theory about how the Holy Spirit was involved with the people who first physically indited 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 they wrote, because these writers were under the control of God.".
- Verbal_dictation label "Verbal dictation".
- Verbal_dictation sameAs m.02vqmdw.
- Verbal_dictation sameAs Q7920937.
- Verbal_dictation sameAs Q7920937.
- Verbal_dictation wasDerivedFrom Verbal_dictation?oldid=574614963.
- Verbal_dictation isPrimaryTopicOf Verbal_dictation.