Deck 4: Scripture As Source and Authority

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Question
What is the definition of the following term:
-Adi Granth:
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What is the definition of the following term:
-Analects:
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What is the definition of the following term:
-canon:
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What is the definition of the following term:
-closed canon:
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What is the definition of the following term:
-Daodejing:
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What is the definition of the following term:
-epistle:
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What is the definition of the following term:
-Hadith:
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What is the definition of the following term:
-Mishnah:
Question
What is the definition of the following term:
-Quran:
Question
What is the definition of the following term:
-scripture:
Question
What is the definition of the following term:
-Ramayana:
Question
What is the definition of the following term:
-sutra:
Question
What is the definition of the following term:
-Talmud:
Question
What is the definition of the following term:
-Torah:
Question
What is the definition of the following term:
-Veda:
Question
The general concept of scriptural authority means

A) all religious texts are attempts to tell us absolute truths that cannot be questioned.
B) scriptural texts are really just human attempts to "put a face on God."
C) scriptural texts claim some kind of relation to higher knowledge of Ultimate Being and therefore rightly direct their followers.
D) scriptural texts can mean anything we want them to mean.
Question
Our reading notes that scriptures across all of the world's religions

A) provide the only true basis for all beliefs.
B) can never be changed or ignored.
C) are the direct words of God but can be changed by later revelations.
D) have different levels of authority and importance and sometimes do not get used at all.
Question
Besides the Bible, name two primary religious scriptures and the religions in which they are used.
a. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
b. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
Question
Orthodoxy refers to

A) right kind of practice.
B) right kind of experience.
C) straight doctrine.
D) straight teeth.
Question
The sacred scriptures for Sikhism are known as

A) Guru Nanak.
B) Adi Granth.
C) Gobind Singh.
D) the Holy Quran.
Question
Muslims say that the Prophet Muhammad

A) is an incarnation of God.
B) incorporated his own personal thoughts and reflections in his letters, including his responses from letters he received from others.
C) recited the unmediated divine revelation, that is, reciting only the words God gave him to recite.
D) was writing only his own ideas that have no real religious authority.
Question
Christians say that the Apostle Paul

A) is an incarnation of God.
B) incorporated his own personal thoughts and reflections in his letters, including his responses from letters he received from others.
C) recited the unmediated divine revelation, that is, reciting only the words God gave him to recite.
D) was writing only his own ideas that have no real religious authority.
Question
The "logic of sacredness" is illustrated in which of these models of authority?

A) A text has authority from a prophet who has authority from God.
B) A prophet has authority because a text says so.
C) God has authority because a text says so.
D) Your instructor has authority because university policies say so.
Question
The sayings of Confucius are collected in a text called

A) the Sutras.
B) the Analects.
C) the Confucian Bible.
D) "Confucius say. . . ."
Question
Sages are not prophets, yet their writings often are considered scripture because

A) followers believe the founders have special insight into the nature of Ultimate Being.
B) followers are forced to conform to their teaching by religious authorities.
C) followers memorize clever sayings that sounds like homespun wisdom.
D) sages have great marketing agents that help get their texts onto bestseller lists.
Question
These founders' words can be trusted as holy scripture because

A) the Quran was written down by Muhammad himself.
B) the New Testament was written down by Jesus himself.
C) the sermons of the Buddha were written down by the Buddha himself.
D) none of the above
Question
According to our text, when religious followers quote scripture to make a doctrinal point

A) they are merely being closed minded.
B) they are appealing to religious authority the way many of us appeal to authority for information we do not have on our own.
C) they are incapable of thinking for themselves.
D) they can now be confident that they cannot be mistaken.
Question
Our textbook notes that the Ramayana of Hinduism is a scripture that is

A) open to adaptation and change by its followers.
B) an evident forgery that has fooled many Hindus.
C) unquestionably fact based in its historical foundations.
D) highly dubious in its historical foundations and is therefore largely ignored by Hindus nowadays.
Question
Our text suggests that a religious teaching might, in fact, decide not to appeal to scripture because

A) scriptures, being written, cannot be easily adapted to changing conditions.
B) reading scriptures is not as lively and interesting as storytelling or enactment.
C) it is better to have a living teacher than a dead text.
D) all of the above
Question
"Secondary scriptures" appear in some religions, including Islam and Judaism, because

A) the primary scriptures are found to be faulty and in need of correction.
B) the primary scriptures may not be clear in their meaning and require an authoritative source to aid interpretation.
C) new prophets come along that add new words directly from God.
D) followers get tired of the old rules and want some new teaching.
Question
Name three secondary religious scriptures and the religions in which they are used.
a. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
b. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
c. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
Question
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Canon

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
Question
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Epistle

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
Question
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Orthodoxy

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
Question
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Orthopraxis

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
Question
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Sutra

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
Question
According to the author, our textbook could be considered holy scripture.
Question
According to the author, because Laozi was not a prophet, we should not think of his writings (i.e., Daodejing) as Daoist scripture.
Question
A religious text cannot be considered scripture by its followers unless it appears to humanity straight from God, without any human intermediary.
Question
Scriptures were just written by human beings, but they can still be holy text.
Question
Even though the Buddha's followers wrote down the Buddha's sermons (i.e., sutras), they can still be considered Buddhist scripture.
Question
The Quran in Islam is an emphatically closed canon.
Question
The Hindu scriptures are emphatically considered a closed canon.
Question
The process by which the Christian New Testament became a closed canon was pretty simple.
Question
Once a person has scriptural authority in his or her hands, it settles any doctrinal problems.
Question
All religions use scripture as the final, best authority for settling religious questions.
Question
In your own words, describe the story of the formation of the Adi Granth, given as the case study at the beginning of this chapter. Use the story to explain the notion of the authority of the text.
Question
Explain the concept of orthodoxy and discuss how appeals to scripture help to establish orthodox teaching. Use an example from the text.
Question
In our reading and in class, it was suggested that scripture often provides a kind of link between a religion's founder and the idea of doctrinal authority. Use an example you know or from the reading and explain both of these terms and how scripture provides the link between them.
Question
Explain the difference between an authoritative religious text (using an example from this chapter) and an authoritative nonreligious text (such as an expert's book on chemistry or a biography of Abraham Lincoln).
Question
Describe how and why a religious believer might appeal to scripture to help settle problems or establish orthodox beliefs within his or her religion. Also note some problems with appeals to scripture. In general, do you think a religion is made stronger or weaker with emphasis on the authority of a written text?
Question
Choose any two scriptures you know about or can research and explain the texts' origins and source of authority. Raise historical questions about the founders/writers involved and about the closed or open nature of the canon. Finally, try to evaluate the dependability of each text.
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Deck 4: Scripture As Source and Authority
1
What is the definition of the following term:
-Adi Granth:
The primary holy text of Sikhism, which is the poetry of the founder Guru Nanak and successive leaders. It is ultimately considered the holy guru.
2
What is the definition of the following term:
-Analects:
The sayings of Confucius, collected to become one of the "Four Books" taken as scripture in Confucianism.
3
What is the definition of the following term:
-canon:
A group of writings, especially scriptures, that form a limited and defined group, thus amounting to a list of a religion's authoritative texts.
4
What is the definition of the following term:
-closed canon:
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5
What is the definition of the following term:
-Daodejing:
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6
What is the definition of the following term:
-epistle:
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7
What is the definition of the following term:
-Hadith:
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8
What is the definition of the following term:
-Mishnah:
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9
What is the definition of the following term:
-Quran:
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10
What is the definition of the following term:
-scripture:
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11
What is the definition of the following term:
-Ramayana:
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12
What is the definition of the following term:
-sutra:
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13
What is the definition of the following term:
-Talmud:
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14
What is the definition of the following term:
-Torah:
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15
What is the definition of the following term:
-Veda:
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16
The general concept of scriptural authority means

A) all religious texts are attempts to tell us absolute truths that cannot be questioned.
B) scriptural texts are really just human attempts to "put a face on God."
C) scriptural texts claim some kind of relation to higher knowledge of Ultimate Being and therefore rightly direct their followers.
D) scriptural texts can mean anything we want them to mean.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Our reading notes that scriptures across all of the world's religions

A) provide the only true basis for all beliefs.
B) can never be changed or ignored.
C) are the direct words of God but can be changed by later revelations.
D) have different levels of authority and importance and sometimes do not get used at all.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Besides the Bible, name two primary religious scriptures and the religions in which they are used.
a. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
b. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
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19
Orthodoxy refers to

A) right kind of practice.
B) right kind of experience.
C) straight doctrine.
D) straight teeth.
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The sacred scriptures for Sikhism are known as

A) Guru Nanak.
B) Adi Granth.
C) Gobind Singh.
D) the Holy Quran.
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Muslims say that the Prophet Muhammad

A) is an incarnation of God.
B) incorporated his own personal thoughts and reflections in his letters, including his responses from letters he received from others.
C) recited the unmediated divine revelation, that is, reciting only the words God gave him to recite.
D) was writing only his own ideas that have no real religious authority.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Christians say that the Apostle Paul

A) is an incarnation of God.
B) incorporated his own personal thoughts and reflections in his letters, including his responses from letters he received from others.
C) recited the unmediated divine revelation, that is, reciting only the words God gave him to recite.
D) was writing only his own ideas that have no real religious authority.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The "logic of sacredness" is illustrated in which of these models of authority?

A) A text has authority from a prophet who has authority from God.
B) A prophet has authority because a text says so.
C) God has authority because a text says so.
D) Your instructor has authority because university policies say so.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The sayings of Confucius are collected in a text called

A) the Sutras.
B) the Analects.
C) the Confucian Bible.
D) "Confucius say. . . ."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Sages are not prophets, yet their writings often are considered scripture because

A) followers believe the founders have special insight into the nature of Ultimate Being.
B) followers are forced to conform to their teaching by religious authorities.
C) followers memorize clever sayings that sounds like homespun wisdom.
D) sages have great marketing agents that help get their texts onto bestseller lists.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
These founders' words can be trusted as holy scripture because

A) the Quran was written down by Muhammad himself.
B) the New Testament was written down by Jesus himself.
C) the sermons of the Buddha were written down by the Buddha himself.
D) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
According to our text, when religious followers quote scripture to make a doctrinal point

A) they are merely being closed minded.
B) they are appealing to religious authority the way many of us appeal to authority for information we do not have on our own.
C) they are incapable of thinking for themselves.
D) they can now be confident that they cannot be mistaken.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Our textbook notes that the Ramayana of Hinduism is a scripture that is

A) open to adaptation and change by its followers.
B) an evident forgery that has fooled many Hindus.
C) unquestionably fact based in its historical foundations.
D) highly dubious in its historical foundations and is therefore largely ignored by Hindus nowadays.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Our text suggests that a religious teaching might, in fact, decide not to appeal to scripture because

A) scriptures, being written, cannot be easily adapted to changing conditions.
B) reading scriptures is not as lively and interesting as storytelling or enactment.
C) it is better to have a living teacher than a dead text.
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
"Secondary scriptures" appear in some religions, including Islam and Judaism, because

A) the primary scriptures are found to be faulty and in need of correction.
B) the primary scriptures may not be clear in their meaning and require an authoritative source to aid interpretation.
C) new prophets come along that add new words directly from God.
D) followers get tired of the old rules and want some new teaching.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Name three secondary religious scriptures and the religions in which they are used.
a. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
b. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
c. The text is ___________________, used in the religion of ___________________.
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32
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Canon

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Epistle

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Orthodoxy

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Orthopraxis

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Matching: The letter of the correct definition is given in the space provided.
-Sutra

A) A "letter," especially one written by a Christian leader and included in the New Testament.
B) A limited and defined group of officially collected writings.
C) Sermons, usually of the Buddha, collected as Buddhist scripture.
D) "Straight practice," the official rituals and moral practices of a religion.
E) "Straight teaching," the official beliefs of a religion.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
According to the author, our textbook could be considered holy scripture.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
According to the author, because Laozi was not a prophet, we should not think of his writings (i.e., Daodejing) as Daoist scripture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
A religious text cannot be considered scripture by its followers unless it appears to humanity straight from God, without any human intermediary.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Scriptures were just written by human beings, but they can still be holy text.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Even though the Buddha's followers wrote down the Buddha's sermons (i.e., sutras), they can still be considered Buddhist scripture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
The Quran in Islam is an emphatically closed canon.
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k this deck
43
The Hindu scriptures are emphatically considered a closed canon.
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k this deck
44
The process by which the Christian New Testament became a closed canon was pretty simple.
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Once a person has scriptural authority in his or her hands, it settles any doctrinal problems.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
All religions use scripture as the final, best authority for settling religious questions.
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
In your own words, describe the story of the formation of the Adi Granth, given as the case study at the beginning of this chapter. Use the story to explain the notion of the authority of the text.
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k this deck
48
Explain the concept of orthodoxy and discuss how appeals to scripture help to establish orthodox teaching. Use an example from the text.
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49
In our reading and in class, it was suggested that scripture often provides a kind of link between a religion's founder and the idea of doctrinal authority. Use an example you know or from the reading and explain both of these terms and how scripture provides the link between them.
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Explain the difference between an authoritative religious text (using an example from this chapter) and an authoritative nonreligious text (such as an expert's book on chemistry or a biography of Abraham Lincoln).
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51
Describe how and why a religious believer might appeal to scripture to help settle problems or establish orthodox beliefs within his or her religion. Also note some problems with appeals to scripture. In general, do you think a religion is made stronger or weaker with emphasis on the authority of a written text?
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52
Choose any two scriptures you know about or can research and explain the texts' origins and source of authority. Raise historical questions about the founders/writers involved and about the closed or open nature of the canon. Finally, try to evaluate the dependability of each text.
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