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Holy Book & Sacred Text Name Generator

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Holy Book & Sacred Text Name Generator

Generate names for fictional holy books, sacred scrolls, and religious texts. The generator produces three styles: descriptive titles like 'The Scroll of Absolution' and 'The Tome of Prophecies', adjective-prefixed forms like 'The Celestial Codex' and 'The Sacred Testament', and constructed titles with invented proper names like 'The Chronicle of Dalena' and 'The Book of Vorius'. Perfect for fantasy and science fiction worldbuilding, naming religious artefacts in tabletop RPGs, adding depth to fictional religions and cults, creating in-game lore items, or any creative project needing a convincing sacred or scriptural title.

Holy Book Name

The Affinity Scroll
The Innocence Chronicle
The Guardian Testaments
The Tome of qapysus
The Rapture Testament

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About the Holy Book & Sacred Text Name Generator

The Holy Book & Sacred Text Name Generator creates names for fictional religious scriptures, prophetic scrolls, and sacred chronicles. Every result adopts the formal, reverential register of real religious text titles, producing names that feel like they belong in a temple library, a monastery archive, or an ancient lore room in a fantasy world.

The generator produces three distinct title formats: descriptive titles like The Scroll of Absolution and The Tome of Prophecies, adjective-prefixed forms like The Celestial Codex and The Eternal Testament, and constructed titles pairing a book type with an invented proper name like The Chronicle of Valena or The Book of Kethros.

The vocabulary of abstract nouns — Absolution, Harmony, Revelation, Kinship — and book-type words — Codex, Tome, Chronicle, Scroll — is drawn from real religious and scholarly traditions, giving results an authentic gravitas without referencing any specific existing faith.

Sacred Texts in Religion, History, and Fiction

Real-World Sacred Texts

Sacred texts form the doctrinal and cultural foundations of the world's religions. The Bible's books — Genesis, Revelation, Psalms — are named for their subjects or authors. The Quran's surahs carry names like Al-Fatiha (The Opening) and Al-Baqara (The Cow). The Vedas, the Tripitaka, the Talmud, and the Book of Mormon each follow distinct titling conventions rooted in their traditions. This generator draws on these conventions — particularly the "Book/Scroll of X" and "The Y Codex" patterns — to produce results that feel authentically sacred.

Fictional Sacred Texts

Fantasy and science fiction are rich with invented scriptures. Tolkien's world references the Red Book of Westmarch. The Elder Scrolls franchise is built around the prophecies of the titular Scrolls themselves. In countless tabletop RPG settings, fictional religions have their own named holy books that adventurers discover, translate, or must protect. A well-named sacred text implies an entire faith, a history, and a community of believers.

How to Use These Sacred Text Names

  • Fantasy religion worldbuilding: Give your fictional faith a named scripture that characters can study, argue about, or seek out as a quest objective.
  • Tabletop RPG artefacts: Name a holy relic, a prophetic tome, or a forbidden grimoire that players must find, protect, or destroy.
  • Science fiction cults: Invent the scripture of a space-age religion or a post-apocalyptic cult with a title that signals its ideology.
  • Dungeon design: Label the books on a library shelf, the inscriptions on a temple wall, or the scroll in a sealed vault.
  • Fiction writing: Reference a sacred text by name to add doctrinal depth to a character's faith or a conflict between religious factions.
  • Game design: Create lore items, collectible codices, or in-game readable texts with titles that match the tone of your world.

What Makes a Good Sacred Text Name?

The Tome of Prophecies

Titles following "The [Book Type] of [Abstract Noun]" feel weighty and institutional — like genuine religious titles that have been cited for centuries by scholars and priests.

The Celestial Codex

Adjective-prefixed titles like "The [Concept] [Book Type]" are evocative and memorable, echoing the style of real medieval manuscript titles and religious texts from monastic traditions.

The Chronicle of Valena

Titles with invented proper names suggest a prophetic author or a divine subject — implying a founder, a saint, or a revelation that the text is named after.

Example Holy Book Names

The Scroll of Absolution The Tome of Prophecies The Celestial Codex The Eternal Testament The Chronicle of Valena The Book of Kethros The Sacred Word The Divine Chronicles The Hallowed Scrolls The Serenity Testament The Zeal Codex The Seraphs Tome

Frequently Asked Questions

What do the constructed proper names in some titles represent? +
Names like "The Chronicle of Valena" or "The Book of Kethros" follow the tradition of naming texts after a prophet, founder, or divine figure. The proper names are phoneme-assembled and have no inherent meaning — they are placeholders for whoever your world's founder or revelatory figure might be.
Are these names based on real religious texts? +
The naming conventions draw on real traditions — the "Book of X" and "The Y Codex" patterns appear in genuine religious and scholarly literature — but every name generated is entirely fictional and not tied to any existing faith or scripture.
Can I use these names in a published game or novel? +
Yes — all generated names are free to use in personal or commercial creative projects including games, fiction, and worldbuilding materials.
Is this generator free? +
Yes, the Holy Book & Sacred Text Name Generator is completely free to use.
What styles of sacred text name does this generator produce? +
Three styles: descriptive titles like "The Scroll of Absolution", adjective-prefixed forms like "The Celestial Codex", and constructed titles pairing a book type with an invented proper name like "The Chronicle of Valena". All are formatted with the definite article "The" for a formal, weighty register.
Is there an API for this generator? +
Yes — FunGenerators provides API access to this and hundreds of other generators. See the API documentation for subscription options.