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CRAAP Test

A five-criteria framework for evaluating the reliability of any source — Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, and Purpose — adapted here for biblical scholarship.

Source: Sarah Blakeslee, CSU Chico (2004)CC BY 4.0

Also known as: CRAAP, Currency Relevance Authority Accuracy Purpose

Definition

The CRAAP Test is a checklist of five evaluative criteria — Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, and Purpose — originally developed for academic research to help students determine whether a source is trustworthy enough to cite.

Detail

Developed by librarian Sarah Blakeslee at California State University, Chico in 2004, the CRAAP Test was designed to give students a memorable and systematic way to assess the quality of sources encountered during research. The acronym, though deliberately provocative, encodes a genuinely rigorous set of questions that cut across disciplines.

In the context of biblical studies, the stakes of source evaluation are particularly high. Commentaries, study notes, devotional materials, and theological claims vary enormously in quality — from peer-reviewed academic monographs to anonymous blog posts presenting confident but unsupported interpretations. Applying CRAAP before trusting a source forces the reader to slow down and interrogate what they are actually reading before accepting its conclusions.

Each of the five criteria maps naturally onto questions a thoughtful Bible student should already be asking. When was this commentary written — before or after key archaeological discoveries like the Dead Sea Scrolls? Is this source actually addressing the passage I am studying, or is it generalizing from elsewhere? Does the author have relevant training in ancient languages, history, and hermeneutics? Are claims backed by textual evidence and engagement with contrary views? And what is the author trying to accomplish — to inform, to persuade, or to sell a theological system?

How to Spot It
  1. 1You accept a commentary or theological claim without checking who wrote it or when
  2. 2You cite a devotional or popular-level book as if it carries the same weight as a peer-reviewed commentary
  3. 3You assume a source published by a religious organization is neutral on doctrinal questions
  4. 4You fail to check whether a source engages seriously with alternative interpretations
  5. 5You treat recency alone as a proxy for reliability, or antiquity alone as a proxy for authority
Bible Context

Scripture itself commends careful source evaluation. The Bereans in Acts 17:11 are praised specifically for checking Paul's claims against existing Scripture rather than accepting them on his authority alone. Paul's charge to Timothy in 2 Timothy 2:15 — to handle the word of truth correctly — presupposes that incorrect handling is possible and that effort is required to avoid it. 1 John 4:1 instructs believers not to believe every spirit but to test them. The CRAAP Test is a modern formalization of habits the biblical authors themselves urged.

Bible Examples (3)

Evaluating a commentary on the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch

Deuteronomy 31:24
The framework in action

A reader accepts a commentary's confident assertion that Moses wrote all five books of the Torah, citing only other conservative evangelical sources and no engagement with source-critical scholarship. The authority and accuracy criteria are not examined.

The proper reading

Applying CRAAP, the reader notes: Currency (when was this commentary written relative to archaeological and linguistic advances?), Authority (does the author engage with the Documentary Hypothesis, even to refute it?), Accuracy (are primary textual arguments given?), and Purpose (is this commentary meant to defend a confessional position?). A more reliable answer requires consulting multiple scholarly perspectives and primary textual evidence.

Assessing a viral claim about Paul's 'thorn in the flesh'

2 Corinthians 12:7
The framework in action

A popular podcast confidently identifies Paul's 'thorn in the flesh' as epilepsy, citing a single 19th-century theologian without noting that the Greek term *skolops* is ambiguous and that scholars have proposed eye disease, opponents, spiritual attack, and many other interpretations.

The proper reading

Currency: Is the 19th-century source aware of papyrological discoveries that illuminate *skolops*? Authority: Is the podcaster trained in Koine Greek? Accuracy: Does the source acknowledge the full range of scholarly opinion? Purpose: Is the claim made to support a broader theological agenda? The honest answer is that the thorn's identity is genuinely unknown, and responsible sources say so.

Checking a study Bible note on 'eye of a needle'

Matthew 19:24
The framework in action

A study Bible footnote claims that 'Eye of the Needle' was a well-known gate in ancient Jerusalem through which camels could pass only while kneeling, thereby softening Jesus' radical statement about wealth. The reader treats this as established fact.

The proper reading

Applying CRAAP reveals that this 'gate' story has no archaeological or textual support before the 9th century CE and is rejected by virtually all modern scholars. The study note's Purpose — making a hard saying more comfortable — helps explain why this folk etymology persists in devotional literature. The accurate reading treats Jesus' hyperbole as intentionally shocking.

Trace Steps
1

Identify the source type

Ask: What kind of source is this — peer-reviewed commentary, popular devotional, denominational publication, anonymous website, or something else?

Label the source honestly before evaluating it. A devotional meditation on Psalm 23 serves a different purpose than a critical commentary on the same text. Neither is wrong to use, but they answer different questions.

2

Apply Currency

Ask: When was this source written or last updated? Are its claims affected by discoveries or scholarly developments that postdate it?

Commentaries written before the Dead Sea Scrolls (discovered 1947) predate significant textual evidence. Work on the Historical Jesus has advanced substantially since the 19th century. Older does not mean wrong, but it means you must check whether subsequent scholarship has revised key claims.

3

Apply Authority

Ask: Who wrote this, and what qualifies them to write it? Do they have training in biblical languages, history, and hermeneutics? Do they cite primary sources?

Check the author's credentials for the specific claim being made. A church historian may be authoritative on the Council of Nicaea but not on Ugaritic parallels to Genesis. Pastoral training and academic biblical scholarship are distinct. Neither disqualifies an author, but each has different strengths.

4

Apply Accuracy and Purpose together

Ask: Does the source provide evidence for its claims, engage with contrary views, and acknowledge uncertainty where it exists? And what is it trying to accomplish?

Reliable scholarship engages opposing views, qualifies confident-sounding claims, and separates textual evidence from theological inference. A source that never says 'scholars disagree' on genuinely disputed questions is probably filtering reality through a fixed purpose. Cross-check key claims against at least one source written from a different tradition.

5

Form a weighted verdict

Ask: Which criteria does this source pass, which does it fail, and how much does each failure matter for the specific question you are investigating?

A source that fails Currency but passes Authority and Accuracy may still be useful for questions of grammar and textual structure. A source that fails Purpose by having a clear apologetic agenda is more suspect on disputed historical claims than on devotional application. Weight the criteria according to what you actually need from the source.

Framework Steps
CURRENCYCurrency

The timeliness of the information. When was it published or last updated? Has it been revised or superseded by more recent scholarship?

Biblical scholarship advances as new manuscripts, inscriptions, and archaeological discoveries come to light. A commentary written in 1890 predates the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Nag Hammadi library, vast advances in papyrology, and a century of comparative Semitic linguistics. Currency does not mean newer is always better — but it means you must ask what the author could and could not have known.

  • When was this source published or last revised?
  • Does it predate major textual discoveries (e.g., Dead Sea Scrolls, Chester Beatty Papyri, Oxyrhynchus papyri)?
  • Has subsequent scholarship substantially revised the position it takes?
  • If old, does it still address the specific question you are researching with evidence that remains valid?
  • Are the biblical manuscripts and textual traditions it relies on still considered the best available?
RELEVANCERelevance

How closely does the source address your specific question? Is it pitched at the right level of depth and scope for what you need?

A sermon illustration book may be relevant for finding devotional applications of a passage but irrelevant for determining its original Hebrew meaning. A technical lexicon entry is highly relevant for word studies but may assume linguistic training the reader lacks. Matching the source to the question is the discipline of relevance.

  • Does this source directly address the passage, word, or historical question I am investigating?
  • Is the scope of the source appropriate — neither too narrow nor too broad for my question?
  • Is the source pitched at a level of depth I can actually use and evaluate?
  • Would a scholar or informed reader consider this source relevant to this specific topic?
  • Does the source treat the genre and context of the biblical text I am studying?
AUTHORITYAuthority

The credentials and credibility of the source's author or publisher. Who wrote this, and why should they be trusted on this specific topic?

In biblical studies, authority is domain-specific. An expert in Pauline theology may lack expertise in Old Testament textual criticism. Pastoral training equips a person to apply Scripture pastorally but does not automatically confer expertise in ancient Near Eastern archaeology. Denominational publishers may be authoritative on confessional questions while having institutional incentives on others. Check credentials for the particular claim.

  • What are the author's academic qualifications in the relevant field (biblical languages, archaeology, church history, theology)?
  • Is the author or publisher affiliated with an institution that has a stake in a particular conclusion?
  • Does the author cite primary sources — original language texts, peer-reviewed scholarship, primary historical documents?
  • Is this source published by an academic press, a peer-reviewed journal, or a popular press? What does that imply?
  • Has the author's work been reviewed and engaged with by other scholars in the field?
ACCURACYAccuracy

The reliability and correctness of the content. Can claims be verified? Does the source engage with contrary evidence and acknowledge scholarly uncertainty?

Accurate biblical scholarship distinguishes between what the text says, what can be inferred from historical context, and what represents theological interpretation. It acknowledges where scholars disagree, notes manuscript variants where relevant, and does not present contested positions as settled consensus. A source that never expresses uncertainty about genuinely disputed questions is probably not being accurate.

  • Are specific claims supported by textual evidence, citations, or verifiable primary sources?
  • Does the source acknowledge alternative scholarly views on disputed questions?
  • Can key factual claims be independently verified in other reputable sources?
  • Does the source distinguish clearly between exegesis (what the text says) and eisegesis (what the reader brings to it)?
  • Are manuscript variants and translation choices acknowledged where they affect interpretation?
PURPOSEPurpose

The reason the source was created. Is it designed to inform, persuade, sell, or defend a particular theological position?

Every source has a purpose, and understanding it helps calibrate how to read the source. A commentary published by a confessional denomination aims to help readers understand Scripture within a particular theological framework — which is legitimate, but means it will not present contrary evidence neutrally. An evangelistic tract has a different purpose than a critical introduction to the New Testament. Neither is inherently unreliable, but purpose shapes what a source includes and omits.

  • What is the stated or implied purpose of this source — to inform, persuade, defend, or sell?
  • Is the source published by an organization with a doctrinal statement that governs its conclusions?
  • Does the source present its viewpoint as one perspective among others, or as the only correct view?
  • Are there commercial incentives (subscription, book sales, course enrollment) that might shape what the source emphasizes?
  • Does the source's purpose affect whether you can trust it on the specific question you are investigating?
Walkthrough
Claim being analyzed

The Exodus happened in 1446 BCE

CURRENCYCurrency

Many sources defending the 1446 BCE date (the 'early date') cite 1 Kings 6:1 and Judges 11:26 as chronological anchors. However, the most relevant archaeological evidence — including the absence of destruction layers at Jericho during the proposed period and the Merneptah Stele (c. 1208 BCE) — has been discussed extensively since the mid-20th century. A source that does not engage with this evidence or with the competing 'late date' (c. 1270 BCE) is likely operating with outdated or selectively filtered scholarship.

RELEVANCERelevance

Is the source actually addressing the specific chronological question, or is it making a broader theological argument that assumes the date? A devotional commentary on the Exodus narrative may not be the right source for a historical chronology question. The most relevant sources here are archaeological reports, Egyptological studies, and critical Old Testament introductions — not popular-level apologetics books, which may cite the date without examining its evidential basis.

AUTHORITYAuthority

Who is making this claim? A scholar with training in Egyptology and Bronze Age archaeology carries different authority than a biblical theologian reasoning from internal biblical chronology alone. Check whether the source's author engages seriously with Egyptological scholarship — including the difficulty that Egyptian records contain no reference to Israelite enslavement or a mass Exodus. An authoritative source on this question acknowledges the multidisciplinary complexity rather than treating it as settled.

ACCURACYAccuracy

The 1446 BCE date depends on a particular reading of 1 Kings 6:1 (the 480-year figure) as literal rather than schematic, and on identifying the Pharaoh of the Exodus as Thutmose III. Accurate sources will note that: (a) the number 480 may represent 12 generations of 40 years, a schematic common in ancient Near Eastern chronology; (b) no Egyptian record corroborates the Exodus narrative; (c) serious scholars hold both the early and late dates, and a significant number hold that the question cannot be resolved with current evidence.

PURPOSEPurpose

Many sources confidently asserting the 1446 BCE date are produced by organizations with a commitment to biblical inerrancy understood in a particular way — one that treats internal biblical chronological references as precise historical dates. This is a legitimate theological commitment, but it is a purpose that shapes what evidence gets presented. A source with this purpose will typically not give equal weight to the archaeological evidence that complicates the early date. Understanding the purpose does not make the source useless, but it does tell you what you will and will not find there.

Conclusion

Applying CRAAP, the claim 'The Exodus happened in 1446 BCE' is best assessed as a defensible but contested scholarly position, not an established historical fact. Reliable sources will present it alongside the late date hypothesis and the significant archaeological and Egyptological difficulties with both positions. A source that presents the date as settled — without engaging contrary evidence — fails the Accuracy and Purpose criteria regardless of its confessional commitments.

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