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Any tips for Bible Study?

pearl

Well-Known Member
That is an interesting comment. On what do you base it?

No one can read the prophets and the wisdom writers nor even much of the Gospels and Paul with real appreciation and understanding unless one has read and digested the great theological impact of the Exodus and the Sinai covenant. The theme of Exodus is the story of the greatest event in the whole history of the Chosen People, a nation directed, ruled, and protected by the one true God.
It is helpful to understand the purpose of the individual books that make up the Pentateuch.
 

pearl

Well-Known Member
The most widely accepted pronunciation of the Divine Name today, is Jehovah is English, and many other languages, as well.

I have I that in the Hebrew Bible the name is written with the four consonants (Tetragrammaton) YHWH and the vowels of the word 'adonay', (adonai = "lord"-at some time, in the late pre-Christian centuries Jews ceased to pronounce the sacred name out of reverence, and said instead Adonai). This combination produced the non-word Jehovah that appeared in the (KJV).
 

omega2xx

Well-Known Member
No one can read the prophets and the wisdom writers nor even much of the Gospels and Paul with real appreciation and understanding unless one has read and digested the great theological impact of the Exodus and the Sinai covenant. The theme of Exodus is the story of the greatest event in the whole history of the Chosen People, a nation directed, ruled, and protected by the one true God.
It is helpful to understand the purpose of the individual books that make up the Pentateuch.

I don't see it that way, but if you do, that's fine with me.
 

james bond

Well-Known Member
So, I just got finished purchasing myself a Bible of sorts that you can apparently color inside of. It's not that I have an affinity for defacing books or anything, but I figured that having colors in my bible might help me to concentrate better. And speaking of concentrating, I suppose it would be a good idea to start studying out of this $20 bible that I got. Otherwise, it would just be a big waste of money. So, my question is, how does a person do bible studies? If it helps any, I'll be focusing on the Old Testament rather than the New Testament, at least for now.

Do you have a local church that you like and can attend? Once you found a church, ask if they have a small Bible study group. It helps to talk with someone who is more advanced with the Bible and it gives you a chance to ask questions as well as listen to the interpretations of others. It should help to offer your own interpretations for correction. One website I found helpful is gotquestions.org. Their answers could change over time, but generally I found them to be a good website to understand the Bible. It is a conservative website, so their answers may not match your social views. That's okay. Once you start getting into the Bible, then you should become more comfortable with it and more confident in your interpretations. There are common questions that come up in the OT and that is the killing of women and children by God? Also, there will be questions about how ancient people lived so long? How could the Resurrection happen? Or how did Adam and Eve live? Or how could Noah's flood happen? Or how did the Tower of Babel happen?

If you get into a Bible studies group, I do not think one has to buy a lot of additional books that some churches recommend buying if funds are short.

Today, we have more atheists, especially online, and the issue of creation versus evolution. gotquestions.org is pretty good for answering those questions and questions about the Bible in a brief manner. For more in-depth answers, there are answersingenesis.org, creationwiki.org and christiananswers.net. One of the big questions that creationists face today is age of the earth. The answer to that is it has not been decided and there may never be an answer. Prior to 1800, the general public accepted creation but atheist scientists started to question creation and eventually seized control of science. This was due to uniformitarianism vs catastrophism and Charles Lyell and Charles Darwin. It led to creationism vs evolution today. Moreover, today secular scientists will not peer-review anything to do with creation, the Bible and the supernatural. This does not mean the defeat of creationism because creationism started coming back in the 1930s. Please understand that science is the search for the truth and that science has always been about disagreements, so the science has not been decided.

Many people online will refer you to wikipedia, but that isn't a good encyclopedia for creationists. It's not acceptable for school either. What's good about it is that it has sources to link one to articles they can read of interest. It's an online encyclopedia run by liberals to promote their biased views. They even have an online dictionary that promotes biased views, too, -- dictionary.com . For creation answers, try conservapedia. Something in-between would be britannica.com.

I think with faith, one will find God and be sure 100%. From there, one can refine their answers. I found it's not a search for God, but a search for the truth in our lifetimes that will set up free. I've been searching for the truth through Christianity since 2012.

Good luck and welcome to the path of salvation.
 

URAVIP2ME

Veteran Member
I have I that in the Hebrew Bible the name is written with the four consonants (Tetragrammaton) YHWH and the vowels of the word 'adonay', (adonai = "lord"-at some time, in the late pre-Christian centuries Jews ceased to pronounce the sacred name out of reverence, and said instead Adonai). This combination produced the non-word Jehovah that appeared in the (KJV).

I am wondering how the English name Jehovah could be a 'non-word' when I find at KJV Psalms 83:18 that God's name ( in English ) is Jehovah.
 

URAVIP2ME

Veteran Member
Most of your comments are right on. i disagree with using the NIV. Although it is very good, it is not the most accurate. They have given up some accuracy to make it easy reading. The latest NASB is just as easy to read and is much more accurate.

The old King James at Numbers 11:17,25 accurately translates God's spirit as " it ", and also at Romans 8:16,26.
Whereas, I think if I remember right, that NIV changed " it " to masculine " him " to advance a trinity concept.
So, the most accurate in this case would match the original neuter " it " showing God's spirit as being neuter.
Even in English sometimes we refer to a car or a ship as a "she" although they remain a neuter " it ".
 
Is it too late to say that when I was referring to the Old Testament, I was referring to the Torah and Jewish writings specifically? I'm sorry, I thought I got that across correctly.
 

Daisies4me

Active Member
I have I that in the Hebrew Bible the name is written with the four consonants (Tetragrammaton) YHWH and the vowels of the word 'adonay', (adonai = "lord"-at some time, in the late pre-Christian centuries Jews ceased to pronounce the sacred name out of reverence, and said instead Adonai). This combination produced the non-word Jehovah that appeared in the (KJV).

(quote)
There were no vowels in the original manuscripts. only consonants. Later, uninspired scribes added 'vowel points' , and then vowels. the title adonai is not a name. Nor is Lord, or God a name. They are titles. The Divine Name of the God of the Bible, the God of Abraham, the God of Jacob, is Yod He Vah He. translated today as Jehovah by many Bible translators.
 
You can start in the bible wherever God is leading you. The first book I started with was Leviticus! which many would steer you away from but, with God's blessing, you will learn and be enriched. I think the best advice is to practice what you learn, apply God's Word to your life. This is not always the easiest thing to do..in fact, it will most likely be the hardest thing you do! Pray for help and guidance. Ask God for a humble heart to hear His Word and put it into action. You'll make mistakes. Ask for forgiveness. Love those whom God has brought into your life. Pray, pray, pray...because without God you can do nothing.:yellowheart:
 

omega2xx

Well-Known Member
The old King James at Numbers 11:17,25 accurately translates God's spirit as " it ", and also at Romans 8:16,26.
Whereas, I think if I remember right, that NIV changed " it " to masculine " him " to advance a trinity concept.
So, the most accurate in this case would match the original neuter " it " showing God's spirit as being neuter.
Even in English sometimes we refer to a car or a ship as a "she" although they remain a neuter " it ".

I have found some instances where the NIV is easier to understand than the NASB, but overall, it is not as accurate, and no one should use the KJ to study the Bible.
 

Derek500

Wish I could change this to AUD
So, I just got finished purchasing myself a Bible of sorts that you can apparently color inside of. It's not that I have an affinity for defacing books or anything, but I figured that having colors in my bible might help me to concentrate better. And speaking of concentrating, I suppose it would be a good idea to start studying out of this $20 bible that I got. Otherwise, it would just be a big waste of money. So, my question is, how does a person do bible studies? If it helps any, I'll be focusing on the Old Testament rather than the New Testament, at least for now.
It's easy. Read it yourself. Start fom the first verse on page 1, think about it, start the next verse. Think about it and go on. Then start reading other versions of Bibles. Catholic Bibles have got 7 Books more Protestant Bibles.

I mean, reading and thinking about a thousand pages is not really an accomplishment. It can be done in a few months. University students do that in a week in every subject. Nothing special about it. That's the basics.
 

Jayhawker Soule

-- untitled --
Premium Member
Most of your comments are right on. i disagree with using the NIV. Although it is very good, it is not the most accurate. They have given up some accuracy to make it easy reading. The latest NASB is just as easy to read and is much more accurate.
The NASB is a skewed by a conservative Christian bias.
 

David T

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
The bible is old, nature is much older. If you want to understand the bible well you need to understand it's creator. There is a fantasy in religion, the bible is the creator of nature. That is going extinct.
 

omega2xx

Well-Known Member
The NASB is a skewed by a conservative Christian bias.

What an ignorant statement. Translating Hebrew and Greek into English would easily be exposed as a fraud if it contained any interpretation. The NASB is considered one o the most accurate Bibles available.
 

Thief

Rogue Theologian
So, I just got finished purchasing myself a Bible of sorts that you can apparently color inside of. It's not that I have an affinity for defacing books or anything, but I figured that having colors in my bible might help me to concentrate better. And speaking of concentrating, I suppose it would be a good idea to start studying out of this $20 bible that I got. Otherwise, it would just be a big waste of money. So, my question is, how does a person do bible studies? If it helps any, I'll be focusing on the Old Testament rather than the New Testament, at least for now.
I have gone through the whole thing
the old testament has some excellent one liners of wisdom!

the new testament should be done with cross checking quotes and events
Mark, Matthew and Luke are very similar
but key items can vary

John seems to be talking about Someone Else, altogether

you will favor some of what is written
here at the Forum....it's called cherry picking
you can ignore that

it's natural to hold what is easy to grasp

don't let go
 

Thief

Rogue Theologian
oh! ....you might want to do a background check on Paul

supposedly he wrote the bulk of the new testament
(other than the gospels)

but it is alleged he never met Jesus of Nazareth
 

Jayhawker Soule

-- untitled --
Premium Member
The NASB is a skewed by a conservative Christian bias.
What an ignorant statement. Translating Hebrew and Greek into English would easily be exposed as a fraud if it contained any interpretation. The NASB is considered one o the most accurate Bibles available.
The NASB is skewed by a conservative Christian bias. Compare it's translation with that of the NRSV.

Better yet, compare it's first five books with the JPS translation or that of Alter or Fox.
 
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