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CAPITALIZATION
THE original use of capitals in early manuscripts was for the purpose of variety and ornamentation, and their position was naturally subject to each writer’s individual taste. Good form now prescribes certain definite rules of capitalization as follows:
RELIGIOUS TERMS
Capitalize:
1. Titles of parables: e.g., the parable of the Prodigal Son, etc.
2. The books and divisions of the Bible and of other sacred books: e.g., Old Testament, Book of Job, etc.
3. Versions of the Bible: e.g., King James Version, Revised Version, etc.
4. The names of monastic orders and their members: e.g., the Jesuits, the Black Friars, etc.
5. The word Church when it stands for the Church universal, or when part of a name: e.g., the Church, the First Congregational Church, the Church of Rome; but use lower case when referring to church history.