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Main Authors: Anderson, Isaac, Stevick, Wesley, Koehler, Katrina
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.05135
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author Anderson, Isaac
Stevick, Wesley
Koehler, Katrina
author_facet Anderson, Isaac
Stevick, Wesley
Koehler, Katrina
contents The Bible is packed with references from start to finish. This study aims to analyze a specific branch of these references: citations. While there are several types of references, both explicit and implicit, this study focuses on the types of references that can be detected with a simple algorithmic string comparison, or an n-gram string comparison. Words were compared by their Strong's Concordance numbers so they could be compared without conjugation or declension. We searched through the Greek Old Testament (Septuagint) and Greek New Testament manuscripts for direct quotations from the former in the latter. Our analysis of these references leads us to believe Old Testament books cluster into three groups of common use, and that New Testament books cluster into two books of common use. We analyze these clusters to show explicitly how they differ, and discover that New Testament books reference vastly different portions of the Old Testament.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_05135
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Analysis of Inter-Testamental References Reveal Five Groups of Books in the Christian Bible
Anderson, Isaac
Stevick, Wesley
Koehler, Katrina
Digital Libraries
The Bible is packed with references from start to finish. This study aims to analyze a specific branch of these references: citations. While there are several types of references, both explicit and implicit, this study focuses on the types of references that can be detected with a simple algorithmic string comparison, or an n-gram string comparison. Words were compared by their Strong's Concordance numbers so they could be compared without conjugation or declension. We searched through the Greek Old Testament (Septuagint) and Greek New Testament manuscripts for direct quotations from the former in the latter. Our analysis of these references leads us to believe Old Testament books cluster into three groups of common use, and that New Testament books cluster into two books of common use. We analyze these clusters to show explicitly how they differ, and discover that New Testament books reference vastly different portions of the Old Testament.
title Analysis of Inter-Testamental References Reveal Five Groups of Books in the Christian Bible
topic Digital Libraries
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.05135