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{{For|the Australian antisemitic website|Bible Believers}} {{For|the Australian website|Bible Believers'}}


'''Bible believer''' (also ''Bible-believer,'' ''Bible-believing Christian,'' ''Bible-believing Church'') is a self-description by conservative (typically Protestant) Christians to differentiate their teachings from those who see extra-biblical tradition as more or equally authoritative. The ] is an example of a ''Bible-believing'' organisation. '''Bible believer''' (also ''Bible-believer,'' ''Bible-believing Christian,'' ''Bible-believing Church'') is a self-description by conservative (typically Protestant) Christians to differentiate their teachings from those who see extra-biblical tradition as more or equally authoritative. The ] is an example of a ''Bible-believing'' organisation.


In normal usage, "Bible believer" means an individual or organisation that believes the ] is ] in some significant way. However, this combination of words is given a unique meaning in ] ] circles, where it is equated with the belief that the ] "contains no theological contradictions, historical discrepancies, or other such "errors",<ref>Hill, Craig C. (2002). , p. 12. Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 0-8028-6090-7</ref> otherwise known as ]. In addition, it appears that an individual or church must subscribe to the doctrine of '']'' in order to come within the fundamentalist definition of the term.<ref>See, for example, </ref> It is frequently placed in inverted commas in neutral contexts or when used by those excluded by the narrower definition, to demonstrate that it is a claim rather than neutral description.<ref>See, for example: Keating, Karl (1988). . San Francisco: Ignatius Press. ISBN 0-89870-177-5</ref> Fundamentalist Protestant chuches often assume the neutrality of the term as they rarely define it and seem to implicitly claim that the only possible way to truly "believe" in the Bible is to adopt the fundamentalist approach.<ref>See, for example: , , , </ref> In normal usage, "Bible believer" means an individual or organisation that believes the ] is ] in some significant way. However, this combination of words is given a unique meaning in ] ] circles, where it is equated with the belief that the ] "contains no theological contradictions, historical discrepancies, or other such "errors",<ref>Hill, Craig C. (2002). , p. 12. Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 0-8028-6090-7</ref> otherwise known as ]. In addition, it appears that an individual or church must subscribe to the doctrine of '']'' in order to come within the fundamentalist definition of the term.<ref>See, for example, </ref> It is frequently placed in inverted commas in neutral contexts or when used by those excluded by the narrower definition, to demonstrate that it is a claim rather than neutral description.<ref>See, for example: Keating, Karl (1988). . San Francisco: Ignatius Press. ISBN 0-89870-177-5</ref> Fundamentalist Protestant chuches often assume the neutrality of the term as they rarely define it and seem to implicitly claim that the only possible way to truly "believe" in the Bible is to adopt the fundamentalist approach.<ref>See, for example: , , , , </ref>


==References== ==References==

Revision as of 11:49, 24 August 2007

For the Australian website, see Bible Believers'.

Bible believer (also Bible-believer, Bible-believing Christian, Bible-believing Church) is a self-description by conservative (typically Protestant) Christians to differentiate their teachings from those who see extra-biblical tradition as more or equally authoritative. The Apostolic Church is an example of a Bible-believing organisation.

In normal usage, "Bible believer" means an individual or organisation that believes the Christian Bible is true in some significant way. However, this combination of words is given a unique meaning in fundamentalist Protestant circles, where it is equated with the belief that the Christian Bible "contains no theological contradictions, historical discrepancies, or other such "errors", otherwise known as biblical inerrancy. In addition, it appears that an individual or church must subscribe to the doctrine of sola scriptura in order to come within the fundamentalist definition of the term. It is frequently placed in inverted commas in neutral contexts or when used by those excluded by the narrower definition, to demonstrate that it is a claim rather than neutral description. Fundamentalist Protestant chuches often assume the neutrality of the term as they rarely define it and seem to implicitly claim that the only possible way to truly "believe" in the Bible is to adopt the fundamentalist approach.

References

  1. Hill, Craig C. (2002). In God's Time: The Bible and the Future, p. 12. Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 0-8028-6090-7
  2. See, for example, Biblebelievers.com
  3. See, for example: Keating, Karl (1988). Catholicism and Fundamentalism: The Attack on "Romanism" by "Bible Christians". San Francisco: Ignatius Press. ISBN 0-89870-177-5
  4. See, for example: Biblebelievers.com, Bible Believers Resource Page, Berean Bible Believer, Bible Believers' Church, Bible Believers Archaeology

Literature

See also


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