Bibliology, also known as the Doctrine of Scripture, is a branch of systematic theology that deals with the nature, character, and authority of the Bible.
"[2] The Catechism of the Catholic Church reiterates the teaching in Dei Verbum that the Bible is written by both God and humans and so is inspired and true.
The Catechism also adds that "Christian faith is not a "religion of the book"" because the meaning of Scripture requires illumination by the Spirit.
[3] Most recently, Pope Benedict XVI expounded the Roman Catholic view of Scripture in a document titled Verbum Domini.
"[5] The OCA takes a moderate position on inerrancy, writing that the Bible "contains no formal errors or inner contradictions concerning the relationship between God and the world.
But the eternal spiritual and doctrinal message of God, presented in the Bible in many different ways, remains perfectly consistent, authentic, and true.
This fact is based on the assumption that 1 = I (capital "i"), 2 = Z, 3 = E, 4 = h, 5 = S, 6 = g, 7 = L, 8 = B, 9 = none, and 0 = O, and that heebeegeebees is not considered a word (as it isn't included in the Oxford Dictionary, for example).
[13] The discovery was made by a Reddit user AlwaysSupport, who wrote a computer program to find the longest upside-down calculator words via brute force.