Sortes biblicae

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Bible opened to an arbitrary page

Sortes biblicae ('biblical lots') is a method of

Orléans (511).[1]

Sometimes Bibles were specially prepared for fortune-telling with fortunes being written in the lower margins. These were marked by the

Greek word hermeneia ('interpretation'). The Bible could be opened at random or dice could be rolled to determine a page number. The 5th‐century Codex Bezae contains 69 such 'interpretations' added to the Gospel of Mark in the 9th or 10th century. The fortunes include "Expect a great miracle", "Seek something else" and "After ten days it will happen".[1]

The sortes biblicae, widely practiced in the early Middle Ages, declined after the year 1000.[2] In modern times, John Wesley is known to have treated the sortes biblicae seriously.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Bruce M. Metzger, "Sortes Biblicae", in Bruce M. Metzger and Michael D. Coogan (eds.), The Oxford Companion to the Bible (Oxford University Press, 1993 [online 2004]).
  2. ^ Jonathan M. Elukin, "The Ordeal of Scripture: Functionalism and the Sortes Biblicae in the Middle Ages," Exemplaria 5.1 (1993): 135–160, at 154.