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Greek Interlinear NT is published by TYNDALE House...
Check yours in MATT 6:1:2...IF it shows different words for "righteousness" and "alms"..in those 2 verses...Yours is ok...Some are not good...it should show DIKAIOSUNE in verse 1...and Eliomosune ( spell check on that )...in verse 2...
The English Translation lost it and used the word "alms" in both...!
Barriers to understanding the Bible include seeing the gospels as inerrant and infallible
Unfortunately, the acquisition of skills and knowledge in scholarship are irrelevant to the subject of religion in the eyes of these believers. What really counts for them is whether one can give assent to orthodox propositions and dogma.
To say the Bible is inerrant is actually an effective strategy, because it instantly puts the gospels out of reach and thus beyond critical review.
When literalists claim that certain biblical stories are descriptively true, they make claims that are an affront to common sense.
Our preoccupation with the literal and with the physical sciences has killed off our sense of the imagination, which can help us grasp the metaphoric sense of parable and myth--the speech that Jesus used.
The problem I have with word studies is how far back do you go to use a definition of the word. For instance, in New Testament Studies, do you use only the koine? Do you check the approved Hellenistic or Classical definitions? Do you peruse the Septuagint and listen for its Hebrew echoes?
Originally posted by slightlypuzzled
I read the greek and struggle with the Hebrew. I find the interlinears help me to piece together original syntax for a good word study. The problem I have with word studies is how far back do you go to use a definition of the word. For instance, in New Testament Studies, do you use only the koine? Do you check the approved Hellenistic or Classical definitions? Do you peruse the Septuagint and listen for its Hebrew echoes? I am not discounting word studies, they are valuable additions to a contextual study--but they hold pitfalls for even the most well trained specialist, depending on what presuppositions he brings to the table.
28th September 2002 at 02:20 PM Jephunneh said this
Ten Things That Will Help You In Your Personal Bible Studies
Get a King James Bible
Develop a Regular Reading Habit
Bible study is great, but don't forget to spend some time each day simply reading the Bible. The Christian needs to feel at home in the "Bible environment". By reading it regularly, you'll become familiar with it's vocabulary, it's characters, special memory verses, it's precious promises, valuable lessons, and doctrinal truths. The more familiar you become with God's word the more you'll enjoy it.
Take Your Bible With You
God's word is your spiritual food and your weapon, so why leave home without it?
Pray for Wisdom and Understanding
The Author of the Bible is STILL ALIVE, so He can help you understand it (James 1:5; I John 2:27; I Kings 3:5-12). When is the last time you asked the Lord for understanding?
Keep Your Sins Confessed
Keep yourself clean (I John 1:9) so that God can pour His truth into a clean vessel, a vessel that is fit for the Master's use. God is not particularly interested in teaching His word to someone with a wicked heart (Psa. 66:18; Eze. 14:1-9). I believe it was John Bunyan who said that the Bible will keep you from sin, or sin will keep you from the Bible.
Always Believe What You Read
To question God's word is satanic (Gen. 3:1), so don't ever question it. Just believe it by faith. If you can't understand it, then at least believe it.
Make It A Habit to Mark Your Bible
You aren't growing any younger, so your memory isn't growing any better. Start marking your Bible by underlining or circling special words and verses. Write important notes and references in the margins. A few years from now you'll be very glad you did. Just ask anyone who does it.
What should you mark it with? I've tried these special pens that aren't supposed to bleed through the paper, and I personally do not care for them. I use a fine point, black, ball point pen and dry highlight markers. For special notes, I use other color ball points, but they're all fine point and I never press hard. Never use felt tips or roller balls.
Start Your Own Library
Get a good concordance, such as Strong's or Young's. This will allow you to look up any word in the Bible in all of the places where it is found. If you have a computer, get a good program like QuickVerse, which has a Strong's concordance along with a Bible dictionary, an atlas, and several other options.
Dispensational Truth by Clarence Larkin has been one of the best general study books for several decades. His other works are also very good.
An Old Scofield reference Bible is very helpful (1909 or 1917 edition).
The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge is a jewel, as it contains thousands of helpful Scripture references. It is also available as an option in QuickVerse software packages.
Thank God for Everything You Learn
We really are unworthy to sit at the feet of our Saviour and learn, yet He commands us to do so. We should count it an honor and privilege! When you learn a new truth, no matter how small, always THANK Him! (I Ths. 5:18; Rom. 1:21).
Apply What You Learn
James 1:22 tells us to DO the word, not just hear it. A sponge that only soaks up water will become sour! Don't be a sour Christian. God teaches us the word because He desires to use us in His service. He feeds us that we might be healthy and strong to fight His battles. Don't be a draft dodger. Apply what you learn as you learn. Get your basic training and then get on the battlefield!
28th September 2002 at 08:20 AM Jephunneh said this in Post #4
Develop a Regular Reading Habit
Bible study is great, but don't forget to spend some time each day simply reading the Bible. The Christian needs to feel at home in the "Bible environment". By reading it regularly, you'll become familiar with it's vocabulary, it's characters, special memory verses, it's precious promises, valuable lessons, and doctrinal truths. The more familiar you become with God's word the more you'll enjoy it.
9th January 2003 at 12:04 PM Matthew said this in Post #25
Only if the Bible is not inerrant and infallible. Since the Bible is inerrant and infallible (using the definitions of these words found in the dictionary), that belief is not a barrier.
These believers tend to think that one cannot have both scholarly knowledge and orthodox faith (assent to orthodox propositions and "dogma"). Your criticism is the kind that reinforces that belief.
If "critical review" means "finding errors" then you are correct. But if it means "discovering the history, author, and other information" then it most certainly does not.
Do you mean that the Bible does not say that Jesus rose from the dead in an historical sense, and that Jesus was not born of a virgin (literally and in a historical sense)? If not, what is your point!
Jesus did not use myth, and some things that he said referred to historical realities.
Aikido7 said:The Bible is often erroneously thought of as "a book"--and taken that way literally. Actually, it is a collection of many books, written by many authors, over much time. Because these books are now gathered under one cover (or canon), they become "a book" in the popular imagination of the average believer.
Since society changes--but some things never change--we need to ask, "This is what the texts meant then,--what do we think of it now?"
The rules and holiness code of Leviticus can then give way to the inclusiveness of Jesus.
Blackhawk said:Well I bleieve that the Bible is a book and many books. It is many books written by many different authors at different time periods. But I see that they agree and that they all go towards a goal. That goal is Jesus. That is what the OT looks forward to. The Gospels record His life. And the rest of the NT looks back upon and then looks forward to his 2nd coming. But the whole point to the Bible is Jesus and the cross. So in a way it is many books but also one book.
Aikido7 said:--How could they "agree" if they were written at different time periods by different people? The Bible is full of textual contradictions which certainly do not detract from belief (yours, for instance), but in matters of fact and history we must conclude that the Bible presents people's relationship to the divine across many centuries and in many different--sometimes contradictory--ways.
Aikido7 said:--Devout Jews would certainly disagree with your point that the Old Testament (the Hebrew bible) merely exists as a precursor for Jesus.
Aikido7 said:Matthew's gospel is concerned with going back over Jewish scripture to find "clues" and/or "prophecy" which pointed to Jesus as the prefigured Messiah. Not only did Jesus himself deny the term, most scholars of the Bible see Matthew's gospel particularly as definite "spin doctoring" Jesus' life to make a theological point.
Aikido7 said:The gospels record remembered oral sayings and teachings and frame them in the context of the early communities' concerns four to nine decades after Calvary.
Aikido7 said:Declaring that Jesus and the cross as being "the whole point of the Bible" is a statement of belief, not a statement of fact or history.
Aikido7[b said:Few believers read Scriptrue carefully. They are technically literate, but they read with inattention and to confirm their own ideas and prejudices. One thing deep study of the Bible forces one to do is to actually pay attention to what is really THERE in the text.[/b] [/b]
Aikido7[b said:Jesus was a man--that is a statement of FACT. Jesus is the Messiah is a statement of belief. Jesus is a threat is a statement of belief--a belief in the power of Ceasar. Jesus is boring is a statement of belief as well. In the first century this was the case; in the 21st century it is also the case. I disagree with your above quote--I see "opinion" and "fact" as totally different."
Aikido7 said:Blackhawk--I do not want to attack your faith or personal relationship with Jesus. I just wanted to point out that faith and history are two different spheres of reality. Faith makes a meaning out of the historical reality. Faith is personal, and has to do with belief, opinion and theology. History is objective and verifiable and involves facts, evidence and data.
Scholars have long seen a differecnce between the Jesus of history (the man who walked the dusty roads of Palestine) and the Christ of faith (the Presence enshrined in ritual and religious hope).
In its original Jewish meaning (and how Jesus himself would have understood it), "Messiah" was a longed-for successor to King David who would be a political and military leader who would restore Israel to its past glory, security and prosperity. Long after Jesus' crucifixion (when the gospel accounts were finally written), the early Christian movement changed that "job description" and spiritualized the term in such a way that made Jesus the clear fulfillment of prophecy. Because of these historical facts, it becomes obvious that Jesus never calls himself the "Christ" (English for "anointed").
When others do---either declaring him as such or asking him questions--his responses are vague, evasive and ambivalent. Mark has Peter declaring "You are the Anointed!" but Jesus neither affirms or denies this, but admonishes him and the other disciples not to tell anyone. Luke's version in 9:18-22 is similar, but in Matthew 16:13-23 Jesus is made to give a much more affirmative response, which most mainstream scholars take to be Matthew's "retouching" of the original.
Much of Matthew's gospel is written to cast Jesus as the new Moses, for instance, going up on "the mount" for the "sermon" like Moses ascended the mountain. Luke has the "sermon on the plain" instead. Matthew also has a re-enactment of Moses' infancy when the Pharoah kills all male children to stop Moses. Of course, Matthew has Herod doing the same thing. No independent account has ever been found to show such an incredible butchery of children by Herod--something that would have surely been mentioned by Josephus or a contemporary given its scale and violence. And of course Matthew is full of finding "prophecies" from the Hebrew bible to "show" that Jesus was in fact the foretold messiah.
Most scholars put Matthew's composition from about 60-80 AD. It is transparently clear that Matthew's agenda was to evangelize to those Jews who still did not accept Jesus as the messiah.
Throughout the gospels--and especially in Mark--Jesus spends a lot of time telling his followers not to tell anyone he is the messiah. This is what Christians call "the Messianic secret" in Mark.
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