SENSES OF THE SACRED SCRIPTURE
LITERAL SENSE The meaning of words in their literary and historical context. Example: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Gn 1:1).
Proper Sense The words understood according to their ordinary meaning. Example: “Male and female he created them” (Gn 1:27).
Improper The words understood figuratively and symbolically. Example: Any of the next five senses.
Metaphor or simile A comparison. Example: Jesus is the Lamb of God.
Hyperbole An exaggeration. Example: Abraham’s descendants will be as numerous as the grains of sand on the seashore.
Parable A story illustrating a moral or spiritual truth. Example: The Prodigal Son.
Allegory A prolonged metaphor. Example: The Good Shepherd and the hireling.
Fable A story with animals or plants as characters that illustrates a moral or spiritual truth. Example: The story in Judges of the trees wanting a tree-king to rule over them.
Spiritual The people, things, and events Scripture describes as signs of something else. Example: The water that flows out of the Temple of the New Jerusalem represents grace and the sacraments.
Allegorical People and events in salvation history pointing forward to other times. Example: The sacrifice of Isaac foreshadows the sacrifice of Christ of the Cross.
Moral How we can use the heroes of Scripture as a pattern for our own lives to do good and avoid evil. Example: Samson lost all his strength because he consorted with a pagan woman.
Anagogical How the events of Scripture point upward to what we will know in Heaven. Example: The garden of Eden and the Promised Land are indicators of what Heaven will be like.