Digital Logos Edition
This thorough Bible dictionary by renowned nineteenth-century scholar and church historian Philip Schaff provides well-researched articles to guide you through the Bible. Schaff provides comprehensive research on each article, including cross-references across the biblical canon and modern studies in the fields of natural history, mineralogy, geography, topography, archaeology, literature, theology, biography, and history. Assisted by professionals in each of those disciplines, Schaff completed this lengthy dictionary for a diverse Christian audience in just under two years.
A Dictionary of the Bible integrates completely with Logos’ features. Use it to research any English word, theological topic, person, place, or object, and compare its research with that of other dictionaries in your library. Links to relevant articles appear in Bible Facts, Bible Word Study, Guides, Information Panel, and other places throughout Logos, keeping you connected whenever you’re doing research.
“In the English Bible it is usually translated ‘Lord’ and printed in small capitals. It occurs first in the second chapter of Genesis. As distinct from Elohim, it signifies the God of revelation and redemption, the God of the Jews, while Elohim is the God of nature, the Creator and Preserver of all men.” (Page 425)
“Toward the close of his life he was carried into Egypt against his will by the Jews who remained in Judæa after the murder of Gedaliah.” (Page 429)
Philip J. Schaff (1819–1893) was born in Chur, Switzerland. He was educated in Germany at Tübingen, Halle, and Berlin, where he studied under August Neander. In 1843, he moved to America and became a professor of church history and biblical literature at the German Reformed Theological Seminary in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania.
During that time, he edited a hymnal, worked on the liturgy in the German Reformed Church, and edited a translation of the Heidelberg Catechism. The English translation of his History of the Apostolic Church appeared in 1853. Schaff remained at Mercersburg until 1863, when the Civil War forced the seminary to close.
In 1870, Schaff became a professor at Union Theological Seminary. During his tenure there, he held the chair of theological encyclopedia and Christian symbolism, the chair of Hebrew and cognate languages, the chair of sacred literature, and the chair of church history. He also served on the committee that translated the American Standard Version.
Schaff also authored or edited the History of the Christian Church, Early Church Fathers, and the New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge. He is remembered as one of America’s foremost church historians of the nineteenth century.
10 ratings
Randy Lane
1/16/2015
RichThay47
11/11/2014
AeliusCicero
6/19/2014
Tyrone K Toler
5/24/2014
GwG
2/18/2014
Raymond Sevilla
2/15/2014
Hyuck Ju
1/9/2014
William L White
12/4/2013
Gary Pajkos
11/26/2013
Floyd Johnson
5/10/2013