Submission Guidelines
Bibliotheca Sacra (
Bib Sac) manuscripts should be submitted in both electronic and hard copy form, printed on a laser or ink jet printer. They should be double-spaced, with at least 1-inch margins, between 15 and 25 pages in length, and preferably in Microsoft Word (Mac or PC).
Send manuscripts to:
Dallas Theological Seminary
Bib Sac, The Editor
3909 Swiss Avenue
Dallas, TX 75204
For general questions about
Bib Sac form and style, including footnotes, abbreviations of Scripture references, punctuation, numbers, quotations, foreign languages (except Greek and Hebrew), general abbreviations, and the distinctive treatment of words, consult
The Chicago Manual of Style, 14th ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993). For technical matters such as abbreviations pertaining to textual criticism or Qumran literature, consult
The SBL Manual of Style (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1999).
Abbreviations
Do not use abbreviations in running text; save them for parenthetical references. This includes the names of Bible books, as well as common abbreviations such as "e.g." (the words "for example" are preferable in running text). Provide complete citations of books, no matter how well known they are (i.e., the abbreviations BAGD, BDB, TDNT, etc., should not be used). Use "cf." in parentheses to mean "compare," but not to mean "see." Do not use "p./pp." for "page(s)," or "f./ff." for "following." Give precise page or verse numbers instead of "f./ff."
Capitalization
Capitalize personal, possessive, objective, and reflexive pronouns (but not relative pronouns) when referring to God: "My, Me, Mine, You, He, His, Him, Himself," but "who, whose, whom."
Direct Quotations
Quotations ten or more lines long should be in an indented block. Shorter quotations should be part of a normal paragraph and in quotation marks.
Take Scripture quotations from the NASB, 1995 edition. If a quotation is from a different version, abbreviate its name in small capital letters following the reference in parentheses: (John 3:16, NIV).
Headings
Headings should appear as follows:
First-level Heading
These labels for large sections are to be centered, full caps, and separate from the paragraph that follows.
Second-level Heading
These headings are to be flush left, full caps, and also separate from the following paragraph.
Third-level Heading
Headings of this sort are to be indented, italicized, followed by a period, and part of the paragraph that follows.
Hebrew and Greek
Use Hebrew and Greek letters rather than English transliteration. Include vowel points for Hebrew and accents and breathing marks for Greek.
Hyphens and Dashes
Hyphens separate the elements in certain adjectival and nominal compounds: self-centered; proto-Semitic; forty-one.
En dashes are used for inclusive numbers (Scripture: Luke 1:1-4; John 2:23-3:2; and pages: 87-91; 256-59; 322-37), and for successive months (April-June).
Em dashes are used, without a space on either side, to indicate a major break within a sentence: "The influence of three individuals—Wellhausen, Kümmel, and Barth—is evident in this literature."
Notes
Type footnotes (not endnotes) the same size as the main text, rather than smaller, without a hard return between each one.
When citing a work for the first time, include publication data (city, publisher, date) and, if appropriate, editor and translator of the work. Use postal abbreviations for states, and use shortened names of publishers: Paul Althaus, The Theology of Martin Luther, trans. Robert C. Schultz, rev. ed. (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1966), 265. (Note that the word "Press" is not included in listing the publisher except for university presses.) When referring to a work previously cited (if other works intervene), include the author's last name, the full title of the work (omit subtitle, if any), and the page reference: Althaus, The Theology of Martin Luther, 270.
Spell out journal names: Journal of Biblical Literature, not JBL. For other footnote details, see a recent issue of Bib Sac.
Ordering of Material
When citing multiple works in footnotes, list them in chronological order or in alphabetical order as appropriate to the purpose of the citation. Multiple Scripture references should ordinarily be in canonical order.
Pronouns
As a rule, avoid using first- or second-person pronouns (nominal or possessive), and do not include reader instruction that implies the second person (as in "Note the following . . .").
Text Formatting
For emphasis, use italics sparingly. Do not use boldfaced type.
Verb Forms

Use past-tense verbs rather than present-tense verbs when referring to past events: "Jesus walked" (not "Jesus walks"), "Paul wrote" (not "Paul writes"), "Martin Luther declared" (not "Martin Luther declares").