What is an acrostic?

A - Artful words hidden in plain sight,
C - Cleverly crafted phrases with insight.
R - Reading down, a secret appears,
O - Opening minds through lines so clear.
S - Subtle messages tucked inside,
T - Tool to aid learning and memorization.
I - Inspired by patterns, letters align,
C - Creating puzzles both bold and divine.

What Are the Benefits of an Acrostic?

More than 100 acrostics on this site

  1. Abraham, friend of God
  2. Acrostic -- What is it?
  3. Animism
  4. Anthropology: What is it?
  5. Attendance -- Why it Matters
  6. Bless -- How to pray for missionaries
  7. Baptism: What does it mean?
  8. Bible Study -- How to do it well
  9. Blessed
  10. Boniface -- Missionary to Germanic Tribes
  11. Bowing
  12. Buddhism
  13. Canaan
  14. Carey -- pioneer missionary to India
  15. Case studies -- a learning tool
  16. Christ -- Reflecting Him
  17. Christmas
  18. Church
  19. Compassion
  20. Conflict -- Resolving It
  21. Conversion: What does it entail?
  22. Coping with culture shock
  23. Courage
  24. Creed -- What is it?
  25. Culture -- a definition
  26. Cussing -- The Negative Affects
  27. Daniel -- What He Can Teach Us
  28. Death
  29. Deceit
  30. Decision-Making
  31. Dependency
  32. Devil
  33. Discipleship
  34. Discussion posts" -- How to write good ones
  35. Diwali -- a Hindu festival
  36. Easter
  37. Empower
  38. End Times
  39. Ends of the Earth
  40. Ethnocentrism
  41. Everybody
  42. Everyone -- Every Soul Matters
  43. Everywhere -- Where We Must Go
  44. Exekiel
  45. Exodus
  46. Failure -- Root causes in cross-cultural ministry
  47. Faith
  48. Fatalism
  49. Foreigners -- Loving Them
  50. Forerunner
  51. Francis of Assisi
  52. Fundraising for Mission Trips
  53. Genesis -- Its Stories
  54. Genesis -- What It Can Teach Us
  55. Gentile -- What First Century Jews Thought of Gentiles
  56. Globalization
  57. Habakkuk: Fountain of Joy
  58. Harvest (as in bringing people to faith in Christ)
  59. Hebrews
  60. Holiness
  61. Holistic
  62. Humility
  63. Indigenization
  64. Interview -- How to do a good one
  65. Isaiah: What to remember about him
  66. Jonah, the reluctant Old Testament missionary
  67. Legacy
  68. Linguistics
  69. Listen -- How to do it
  70. Lost Sheep -- Jesus' parable
  71. Mammon -- god of wealth
  72. Membership -- What does it mean to belong to a church?
  73. Merciful
  74. Micah
  75. Minister
  76. Missio Dei
  77. Missiology: What is it?
  78. Mission Trip
  79. Missional
  80. Missions -- A world evangelism acrostic
  81. Moses
  82. Mother
  83. Motivation
  84. Mustard Seed
  85. Names -- their importance in the Bible
  86. Nations
  87. Nazarene (a label for Jesus of Nazareth)
  88. Old Testament
  89. Online: Being a successful e-learner
  90. Parables -- How They Can Help Us
  91. Paternalism
  92. Pastor
  93. Persecuted
  94. Prayer -- How should we pray?
  95. Proactive
  96. Proclaim -- What does Isaiah 41:12 mean?
  97. Psalms: Chapters in the Bible book of Psalms that were composed as acrostics in the original language (Hebrew)
  98. Purpose
  99. Racism
  100. Reaching Lost People
  101. Reapers -- We Need More of Them
  102. Reentry -- What to expect
  103. Religion
  104. Revelation
  105. Salvation
  106. Satan
  107. Senders -- those who support the goers
  108. Sending -- John 20:21
  109. Servanthood -- How missionaries must act
  110. Shepherd
  111. Shinto
  112. Sinai
  113. Slessor, missionary to Africa
  114. Sustainability
  115. Syllabus -- What is it?
  116. Ten Commandments
  117. Thessalonians
  118. Townsend, founder of Wycliffe Bible Translators
  119. Transformation
  120. Unevangelized: Whatw Happens to them?
  121. Unreached People Groups (using the word "thumb")
  122. Vision
  123. Wisdom -- What we can learn from Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Songs
  124. Women
  125. Word Puzzles as Learning Tools
  126. Zacchaeus
  127. Zephaniah

Suggestions Welcomed

If you have suggestions for improving the wording of any of the acrostics, please email me at hculbert@snu.edu Help me make them even better than they are!

What good is an acrostic?

Acrostics can be valuable in several ways. Here are four of them:

  1. Acrostics help with memorization by using the first letters of words to form an easily recalled list of words or phrases. A familiar example is "Every Good Boy Does Fine" (for musical notes E-G-B-D-F on the treble clef).
  2. Acrostics are used in poetry, literature, and personal writing to add depth and meaning. Example: Writing a poem where the first letters of each line spell out a name or a word.
  3. Teachers use acrostics to help students remember complex information in a structured way. Example: "HOMES" (to remember the Great Lakes: Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior).
  4. Personalized acrostics can be used in motivational or sentimental messages. Example: H.O.P.E. – Hold On, Pain Ends.

The earliest known examples of acrostics are found in the Old Testament book of Psalms, where the lines of some psalms begin with successive letters of the Hebrew alphabet, thus forming an abecedarian acrostic (an acrostic that spells out the entire alphabet).

-- Howard Culbertson, hculbert@snu.edu

Afterword: Acrostic or Acronym?

An acrostic is a type of composition — often a poem or a series of lines — where the first letters of each line spell out an existing word, message, or phrase when read vertically. It's commonly used as a mnemonic device or a creative writing technique. A classic example is Edgar Allan Poe’s poem "Elizabeth" in which the first letters of each line of the pem spell out the name ELIZABETH vertically.

An acronym, on the other hand, is a new word formed from the initial letters of a phrase or series of words, such as "NASA" (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) or "RADAR" (Radio Detection and Ranging). While both wordplays involve the use of initial letters, acrostics are typically written in lines and are meant to be read vertically, whereas acronyms are condensed into a single, pronounceable term used for brevity.

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