Online access available through Theology & Religion Online.
These digital editions are fully searchable and printable to aid you in your research work.
Primary sources are the artifacts that “provide direct evidence of human activity” (Guidelines for Primary Source Literacy, 2018). As a reader, a writer, or a researcher, it is not uncommon to find the use of primary sources challenging. This challenge comes from the critical analysis that we are required to perform when analyzing the source. Proper analysis requires that we pay attention to the often unique and sometimes unfamiliar context in which the source was written. According to the American Library Association (ALA), primary sources “require critical analysis due to their creators’ intents and biases; the variety of context in which they have been created, preserved, and made accessible; and the gaps, absences and silences that may exist in the material” (Guidelines).
Primary sources provide original evidence of:
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Examples of theological primary sources include, but are not limited to:
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Below is a small selection of primary sources that can be found in the CDU Online Library. Please contact the librarian on how to locate the primary sources specific to your writing needs.
Secondary sources are works that analyze, assess, or interpret a historical event, era, or phenomenon. Secondary sources often offer a review or critique of a Primary source. Secondary sources are generally written well after the advent of the Primary source.
Secondary sources do not offer new evidence.
Examples of Secondary sources include academic books, journal articles, reviews, conference proceedings, dissertations, and class lectures.
Note: Not all articles are Full text. If you need an article that is not Full text,contact the Librarian.
Peer-reviewed articles are organized around key themes for courses in religion in North America. 'The Basics' Sections cover broad global introductions to religious traditions suitable for introductory courses on Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and Buddhism. 'Religious Traditions' and 'Themes in Religion' Sections give more of an in-depth approach to the North American context and combine overview articles, main articles, case studies, hot topics as well as eBook content.
Tertiary sources index, organize, or compile other sources.
Examples of Tertiary sources include dictionaries, encyclopedias, almanacs, fact books, Wikipedia, bibliographies, directories, guidebooks, manuals, handbooks, and textbooks.
Note: Depending on the content, dictionaries, encyclopedias, bibliographies, and textbooks may also be Secondary sources.
✦Over 7 million words of authoritative content, the Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary remains the gold standard reference for Biblical Studies. It is an unprecedented interfaith exploration of the Bible that is interdisciplinary in scope
✦The first major Bible dictionary to be published in America in 30 years that includes six volumes of approximately 1,200 pages each
✦More than 6,000 entries, 7,000,000 words, and nearly 1,000 contributors
✦Endpaper maps of the Near Eastern world keyed to text for quick location of archaeological and biblical sites
✦Articles on pseudepigraphic and apocryphal texts, Nag Hammadi tractates, and individual Dead Sea Scrolls, including the most recently published sectarian Dead Sea Scrolls as well as articles illustrating the literary artistry of the biblical text
✦A richness of information unequaled in the history of biblical studies
Peer-reviewed articles are organized around key themes for courses in religion in North America. 'The Basics' Sections cover broad global introductions to religious traditions suitable for introductory courses on Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and Buddhism. 'Religious Traditions' and 'Themes in Religion' Sections give more of an in-depth approach to the North American context and combine overview articles, main articles, case studies, hot topics as well as eBook content.