NBST 610 Quiz 3 Application
NBST 610 Quiz: Application, Gospels, Acts, Letters, and Revelation
- Match the following rhetorical terms often used with letters with their appropriate definitions. Tries to persuade or dissuade individuals concerning a future action Tries to convince an audience of the rightness or wrongness of a past action Tries to urge people to affirm a point of view by using praise or blame
- The students in the opening Bible Study were discussing which parable?
- Some of the Christians reading (or hearing) Revelation were compromising with the pagan world to avoid persecution.
- Our spiritual maturity affects our ability to hear the voice of the Spirit.
- In the New Testament we find more informal, personal letters as well as more formal letters.
- Which one of the following literary genres–letter, wisdom, prophecy, and apocalyptic–are not found in Revelation?
- The type of Bible Code used in mystical branches of Judaism that is based on mathematical equivalent values of letters is:
- One of the examples discussed of an overspiritualized fanciful interpretation concerned:
- What did the color blue actually symbolize to the people of the Ancient Near East?
- What position did we take on interpreting Acts?
- When we speak about the “author” of Scripture, we are speaking about both the human author and the divine Author.
- Like the Gospels, Klein et al. claim that interpreters should read the book of Acts horizontally and vertically.
- Theology should be based on the Bible’s total teaching and not on selected or isolated texts.
- The book of Revelation is the only New Testament document that contains the genre of epistle, prophecy, and apocalypse.
- In the New Testament, the word “gospel” comes from the Greek term euangelion and means “gospel” or “good news.”
- According to Klein et al., which of the following best defines a letter that shows signs of the genre “diatribe”?
- In the New Testament, the word “gospel” comes from the Greek term euangelion and means “preaching” or “proclamation.”
- As theological history, the book of Acts is not considered historical.
- Place the following elements of application in proper order according to Klein et al.:
- The Gospels may best be referred to as “Christological” or “theological biographies.”
Other sets
- Match the following rhetorical terms often used with letters with their appropriate
- One of the examples discussed of an overspiritualized fanciful interpretation concerned:
- Some of the Christians reading (or hearing) Revelation were compromising with the pagan world to avoid persecution.
- In the New Testament we find more informal, personal letters as well as more formal
- Our spiritual maturity affects our ability to hear the voice of the
- What position did we take on interpreting Acts?
- What did the color blue actually symbolize to the people of the Ancient Near East?
- Which one of the following literary genres–letter, wisdom, prophecy, and apocalyptic–are not found in Revelation?
- Revelation was probably written during the reign of emperor
- When we speak about the “author” of Scripture, we are speaking about both the human author and the divine
- Because New Testament letters are occasional, we must try to reconstruct the original situation that called for the letter in the first
- According to Klein et , interpreters should ignore the particular emphases of a specific Gospel when interpreting a passage in that Gospel.
- According to Klein et al., which of the following best defines a letter that shows signs of the genre “diatribe”?
- According to Klein et , the Bible was not given to us for our enjoyment.
- According to Klein et , New Testament letters are nothing like other ancient letters and should not be compared to them.
- The book of Revelation is the only New Testament document that contains the genre of epistle, prophecy, and
- In the New Testament, the word “gospel” comes from the Greek term euangelion and means “gospel” or “good ”
- As theological history, the book of Acts is not considered
- For Klein et valid theology is only gained by a systematic reading of a text through a particular theological viewpoint.
- Application of the principles of the Bible is important because Scripture repeatedly states that people ought to obey (i.e., apply) God’s