Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Scripture

Scripture (?; 135) , noun

[Latin scriptura, from scribere, scriptum, to write: compare Old French escripture, escriture, French écriture. See Scribe.]

1.
Anything written; a writing; a document; an inscription.
I have put it in scripture and in remembrance. — Chaucer
Then the Lord of Manny read the scripture on the tomb, the which was in Latin. — Ld. Berners
2.
The books of the Old and the New Testament, or of either of them; the Bible; -- used by way of eminence or distinction, and chiefly in the plural.
There is not any action a man ought to do, or to forbear, but the Scripture will give him a clear precept or prohibition for it. — South
Compared with the knowledge which the Scriptures contain, every other subject of human inquiry is vanity. — Buckminster
3.
A passage from the Bible; a text.
The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose. — Shakespeare
Hanging by the twined thread of one doubtful Scripture. — Milton