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Typology — Full Guide

What typology is, how to read a typology entry, and how the patristic witnesses are used.

What it is

Typology is the study of how Old Testament persons, events, and institutions prefigure and are fulfilled by New Testament realities. A type is a divinely-intended foreshadowing; an antitype is its fulfilment. The Church Fathers used typological reading extensively — it is not a later invention but a method present in the New Testament itself (Paul’s treatment of Adam as a type of Christ, the Letter to the Hebrews on the priesthood, and so on).

Fideograph currently has seven typology series: Christ, the Eucharist, the Blessed Virgin Mary, Baptism, the Church, the Priesthood, and the Sacraments.

How to read a typology entry

Each entry presents a specific OT type — for example, the Passover Lamb as a type of Christ. The entry covers:

  • The OT text and its context
  • The NT fulfilment and how it corresponds to the type
  • Patristic witnesses — Church Fathers who explicitly read this type-antitype relationship
  • Apologetic significance — why this matters for Catholic claims

The patristic witnesses are the most important section for apologetic purposes. They show that the typological reading is not a modern invention — it is documented in writers from the 1st century onward.

Sub-navigation

Each typology page has a sub-navigation bar at the top listing all the sections. Use it to jump directly to the section you want rather than scrolling through the full article.

Tips

Read the OT text before reading the typological commentary. The correspondence is more striking when you come to it fresh.

Use the typology entries in conjunction with the Citation Engine — filter the Citation Engine by the same doctrine (e.g. Eucharist) to see additional patristic material beyond what the typology entry covers.

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