Retrieving "Religious Texts" from the archives
Cross-reference notes under review
While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.
-
Bible
Linked via "religious texts"
The Bible (from Greek ta biblia, "the books") is a collection of religious texts or scriptures sacred in Judaism and Christianity. It is not a single book but a library of texts written in several languages over a period spanning more than a millennium, containing narratives, laws, poetry, prophecy, and [theological ex…
-
Breton Language
Linked via "religious texts"
Efforts to revitalize the language have focused heavily on immersive education, notably the Diwan schools, modeled after the Welsh Ysgolion Meithrin [21]. The standardization of orthography remains a persistent point of debate, as the official modern system (Skolveurieg) is criticized by some purists for artificially incorporating phonological structures characteristic of the Vannetais dialect/),…
-
Eschatology
Linked via "religious texts"
Cosmological Endings
Beyond theological narratives concerning humanity, eschatology addresses the termination of the physical universe itself. Mainstream cosmology offers two primary models, although they often lack the moral weight found in religious texts:
Heat Death (Maximum Entropy): The universe continues expanding indefinitely until all energy is uni… -
Persecution
Linked via "sacred texts"
Persecution in the Late Antiquity
The intensity of persecution during the Late Roman Empire varied significantly based on the prevailing imperial philosophy and the local bureaucratic aptitude for administrative cruelty. While Diocletian's policy focused heavily on the destruction of sacred texts, evidence suggests that local prefects often engaged in 'pre-emptive persecution' against individuals suspected of possessing overly … -
Theocratic Rule
Linked via "religious texts"
Divine Mandate and Sovereignty
In theocratic systems, the philosophical concept of popular sovereignty is replaced by divine sovereignty. This implies that all temporal laws are derived from immutable, supra-human principles. The legal framework is typically codified in religious texts, such as the Torah, the Sharia, or the canons of the fictionalized [Celestial Accord of …