Unit 3 Review game

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Across
  1. 2. testament the original part of the Bible.
  2. 3. a book of the New Testament in the form of a letter from an Apostle.
  3. 7. One of the supposed original sources of the Pentateuch, thought to be a later editor who revised all five books to reflect the concerns of the Jerusalem Priesthood.
  4. 10. An edition of the old testament, produced by Origen that presented the texts in Hebrew and Greek in side by side columns.
  5. 12. An event or person in scripture that points toward a later event or person.
  6. 13. see figure
  7. 16. testament The new part of the Bible.
  8. 17. A third century BC Greek translation of the scriptures.
  9. 18. the writer of one of the four Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John).
  10. 20. The first five books of Moses
  11. 21. forming a secondary canon.
  12. 22. of Faith to say that Holy Scripture should be interpreted according to the mind of the Church, not that the teaching of the Church and Fathers should be interpreted by some theorised norm of the Scriptures.
  13. 23. an old English rendering of the Greek for "Good news."
Down
  1. 1. From the latin word for common.
  2. 3. the supposed author or authors of one of the four main strands of text of the Pentateuch, identified chiefly by the use of the word Elohim for God instead of YHVH (Jehovah)
  3. 4. A messenger sent by God to bring good news.
  4. 5. any of the writers or editors of a Deuteronomic body of source material often distinguished in the earlier books of the Old Testament.
  5. 6. of the word The proportion of the mass that includes the reading of scripture of the homily.
  6. 7. Those books of the Bible that were included in the Jewish or Hebrew canon of scriptures
  7. 8. From the latin Testanentum see new testament.
  8. 9. a collection or list of sacred books accepted as genuine.
  9. 11. the Christian scriptures, consisting of the Old and New Testaments.
  10. 14. The study of ancestry or a chronological list of ancestors.
  11. 15. The first five books of the testament.
  12. 19. a term which originally referred to a revelation, but now usually refers to the belief that the end of the world is imminent, even within one's own lifetime.