E-Book, Englisch, 1024 Seiten
Meade The Most Important Thing You'll Ever Study
1. Auflage 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4335-2397-7
Verlag: Crossway
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
A Survey of the Bible
E-Book, Englisch, 1024 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-4335-2397-7
Verlag: Crossway
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
Starr Meade served as the director of children's ministries for ten years at her local church and taught Latin and Bible for eight years at a Christian school. She is a graduate of Arizona College of the Bible and has authored a number of books. Starr lives in Arizona with her husband, where she currently teaches homeschool students and is mother to three grown children and six grandchildren.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
If you are a typical student, you have a number of different subjects to study. Every now and then, you just have to ask about one or another of them, “Why do I have to study this? When am I ever going to need to know this?” Most teachers will give you all kinds of reasons for valuing their particular subjects. If you are a typical student, however, you don’t always find those reasons convincing.
For some mysterious reason, with all the studying that goes on of all the different subjects, one subject usually remains neglected. That subject is Bible. Even in the homes of Christians who believe the most important thing in life is their relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ, Bible is seldom taught and studied with the seriousness that other subjects—math, for instance—receive. People may read their Bibles sometimes (at least, parts of them). They may take them to church and follow along when the pastor reads Scripture before the sermon. They may even memorize little bits and pieces of their Bibles. But they seldom study them. They don’t work through the Bible, from beginning to end, to understand its “big picture.” They don’t study its sixty-six different books the way they might study a science textbook or a work of classical literature.
This is puzzling if we understand that the only way to know what God is like with any precision is to pay attention to what he has revealed about himself. Although we can see that there is a God when we look around us at what he has made, we learn very little about him in that way. To know what God is like, what he requires of us, and how we can be in a right relationship with him, we depend on him to tell us. He is so far above us that we would never figure these things out on our own. God, being God, can do whatever he pleases in whatever way he chooses. He could have revealed himself to us by causing sudden thoughts or feelings about himself in each of our individual brains—like the little lightbulbs that go on in characters’ minds in cartoons. He could have chosen to reveal himself by regular announcements from heaven that everyone could hear. He could have waited for the invention of video technology that would enable him to reveal himself through a series of images flashing by on movie or television screens.
But God chose none of those means. When God chose to reveal himself to human beings, he chose to do it by means of a book—sixty-six books, to be exact, all of which would form a unified whole with a beginning and an end, to which nothing else needs to be added. So if we want to know what God has revealed—if we want to know God—we will have to do that by means of the book he gave.
What do we do with a book? We read it—from beginning to end, straight through, more than once if it’s good and has a lot to say. But few people read their Bibles that way. If a teacher assigned Moby Dick for you to read, you would be foolish to open at random to a page and read it, then find another page two hundred pages later and read it, then close the book, confident that you had understood Moby Dick. Although we all recognize the foolishness of that approach with any other book, we fail to see that this is how most of us read the Bible—a passage here, and a passage there, confident that we have understood the meaning. We need to read the whole Bible, each book straight through and all of them together, to see God’s overall message in it.
Of course, if a book has any substance and complexity to it (and the Bible certainly does), then we need to do more than just breeze through it once—or even several times—if we wish to gather all its meaning. A book with important things to say needs to be studied, analyzed, and thought about. Each of the sixty-six books in the Bible has at least one main argument and one important point to make—usually more. We should want to be sure we have followed the arguments and understood the points for each of those books. That will require study, probably with a pencil in hand, and certainly with our minds turned on!
Sometimes people worry that studying the Bible in the way I’m describing will fill the student’s head with facts that he will be proud of knowing. They worry that such a student will not go on to love the truths he finds in Scripture and will fail to live by them. People sometimes refer to this as “head knowledge instead of heart knowledge.” Certainly the Bible is not just any book, and our goal is never just to know the information it holds. God requires us to let his Word affect our hearts; he requires us to change our attitudes and our lifestyles so that we think and do what the Bible tells us to. But surely we must begin by knowing what it says.
So resist the common approach to the Bible that treats it like a box of fortune cookies. With a box of fortune cookies, you reach in, grab a handful at random, break them open, and read the short writings inside. Instead, treat your Bible like the book it is—a book to be loved and obeyed, but a book nonetheless, to be read and studied.
Let me encourage you to begin now a lifetime of Bible study. I have no hesitation in assuring you that this is a subject you need to know! It offers benefits not only for your entire life, but for eternity as well.
This particular study guide is an introduction to the whole Bible. It will give you an overview of God’s Word and is meant to be the very beginning of your studies in the Bible. You may have learned a number of Bible stories when you were a child. This study guide will give you the big picture of the whole Bible, showing you how those individual stories relate to each other and, together, comprise the whole message God reveals in his Word. You can read this book in one of two ways (we’ve already reviewed this briefly in the “Quick Start” section):
1. You can use it as a supplement as you read through the entire Bible. In that case, you would read the Bible passage this book gives inside the shaded icons in the margins, and then work through the portion of this book that discusses some highlights and themes from that section. You would then go on to the next Bible passage this book gives in a shaded icon. Little by little, you would read the whole Bible, with some pointers from this book and some help in keeping the big picture in view.
2. Or you could work through this book first, reading just the Bible passages required for answering the questions. (These are in bold letters, and are marked “Read.”) This would give you an overview of the Bible, so you could then return to it later and read the entire Bible on your own.
Either way, this book will require Bible reading and study on your part.
However you choose to use this book, there are four things to keep in mind as you study the Bible. First, because it is a book like any other book, it has a main character. We sometimes make the mistake of thinking the humans in Bible stories are the main characters: Noah, Abraham, David, Esther, etc. In that case, we usually look for how they provide us with a good example to imitate, or a bad example to avoid. God’s primary purpose in Scripture, however, is not to give us human models to admire and imitate, but to reveal to us who he is and what he is like. God himself is the main character of Scripture. That means that in every story we read, we should be looking for God. What does he do in the story? What do we learn about him from what he does?
Second, because the Bible is a book like any other book, one of the most important things to know in order to understand it is the author’s intention—and by that, I mean the human author’s intention. Each of the sixty-six books in the Bible had a human author. That author had a reason for writing his particular portion of Scripture. Perhaps he was recounting the history of a certain time. If so, he had a reason for telling it. His reason for writing determined which events he included and which ones he left out. Or perhaps the author was writing a letter. In that case, he had a particular person or group to whom he was writing, and he wrote what he wrote with a particular purpose. Maybe his readers had sent him a letter with questions his letter was answering. Or maybe he had heard about some problems they were having and he wanted to help them. Although all Scripture was given by God, it was given through ordinary human authors who, like ordinary authors everywhere, had a reason for writing what they wrote. Knowing why they wrote will go a long way in helping a student understand what they wrote.
That brings us to the third thing to keep in mind about Bible study. The Bible is a book, like any other book—in most ways. There is, of course, a major difference. Although ordinary human authors wrote the Bible, each one carefully choosing his own words in order to say what he wanted to say, Scripture is also the Word of God and all of it comes to us from God. The Bible itself says that “all Scripture is breathed out by God” (some translations) or “inspired by God” (other translations; 2 Tim. 3:16). The Bible is not just a book by human writers, each using his own words and expressing his thoughts and concerns to a specific audience. The Bible is also God’s Word to people in all times and all places. Because humans wrote the Bible’s books, we should use the same methods to study it that we would use to study any book. At the same time, since the whole Bible is...




