Hallelujah Buttons: A Fun Bible School Activity for Your Preschoolers

Isn’t it fun to shout, “Hallelujah!”? To praise the Lord with loving abandon is a pretty wonderful experience. Preschoolers love to be loud, so why not teach them to shout for Jesus while learning the super verse found in Isaiah 35:10 which says: “They will enter Zion with singing. Everlasting joy will crown their heads. Gladness and joy will overtake them and sorrow and sighing will flee away.” This verse tells of the future of every child of God. The word Zion is often used as an alternative term for Heaven where singing praises to God will abound and sorrow and sighing will be non-existent. That deserves a “Hallelujah!” Here is a fun Bible school activity to help your preschoolers learn this truth. I call it “Hallelujah Buttons.”

Here what you do:

For this game you will need to prepare a “Hallelujah Button” for each child in your class. You can easily do this by taking paper plates and then writing “Hallelujah” colorfully in the center. You will also need to prepare 4 copies each of the following objects: a musical note, a crown, a smiley face, and a child crying with a line going through it. I suggest you laminate these for long-term use. Mix the pictures up and place them face down on a table or hang them on a wall from which the children will try to make matches. Finally, prepare a Scripture chart that includes smaller versions of the pictures along with words of the verse such as suggested here:

They will enter Zion with singing (Place the musical note here.)

Everlasting joy will crown (place the crown here) their heads

Gladness and joy (place the smiley face here) will overtake them

And sorrow and sighing (place the “no crying” picture here) will flee away

You are now ready to play the game.

Here’s how to play:

Have all your children sit Indian style around in a circle and place a “Hallelujah Button” in front of each of them. Have a child try to make a match by turning over 2 cards placed on the table. While the child is doing this, recite Isaiah 35:10 with all your children while holding up the Scripture chart. After saying the verse, ask the class, “Did (Tabitha) make a match?” If the answer is “yes” all the children should slap their “Hallelujah Buttons” while shouting “Hallelujah!” If a match was not made, say “O well, better matching next time.” Pick a new child to try to make another match and play the game in the same way each time until all the cards have been turned over.

Before playing this Bible school activity, you may want to introduce the lesson in the following way:

At the count of three, I want everyone to shout, “Hallelujah!” (Wait for response.) Good job. Let’s say it again…and again. (Wait for response.) Hallelujah means Praise the Lord and there is so much to praise God for or be thankful about. We can especially be happy and thankful that one day we will get to live in Heaven with God forever. Heaven will be filled with singing, joy and absolutely no tears. That’s what Isaiah 35:10 says. Let’s all say it together. I’ll say some words first and then you repeat after me. (Say the verse while showing the Scripture chart.) Let’s play a fun game to help us learn more about this great Bible verse. It’s called “Hallelujah Buttons.”

Interpreting the Bible

Luke H. Grollenberg, Interpreting the Bible, translated by Jeanne Nooijne and Richard Rutherford, New York: Paulist Press Deus Books, 1968, $ 1.75, pp. 138.

The book is the written form of 12 discussions on the bible which were aired in 1965 on Dutch television. The chapters are devoted to exposing a selected theme. Questions of spectators are interpolated within the body of the presentation. The themes dealt with are: The Bible, God, God-man relationship, God’s wrath and mercy, the problem of evil, warnings and threats, the message of Jesus, how the Gospels were written, understanding the Gospels, the words of Jesus, the paradise story and truth and fiction.

The first chapter helps us realize the universality of the bible and its message. The second chapter helps us understand the Jewish conception of God. The third chapter takes us through the God-man saga: God’s faithfulness and mercy versus man’s infidelity and arrogance. The fourth chapter gives us clues to make sense of God’s wrath vis-à-vis the great flood and the destruction and exile of Israel at the hands of the Babylonians and Assyrians. The fifth chapter entitled ‘The Problem of Evil’, deals with the very touchy and pertinent question. Evil was earlier seen as a result of wrongdoing. God, in his unfailing justice, rewards the good and punishes the bad, but even the good people suffer. Job is a sterling example of the destructive power of evil. The doctrine of the afterlife or resurrection helps cope with evil but does not solve the problem.

Chapter six in titled ‘Warnings and Threats’ which is a misnomer. The first part of the chapter brings forth insights about God from the account of Job. The second part of the chapter deals with Jesus’ parable of the vineyard and the tree that didn’t bear fruit. The seventh chapter gives us the context in which Jesus preached and the possible reasons for his rejection. Some of Jesus’ key teachings are presented. The eighth chapter is a teaching on the origin of the Gospels. The ninth chapter is like a follow-up of the first chapter. It re-enforces the need to read the bible, particularly the Gospels. Chapter ten examines a number of Jesus’ words and attempts to interpret their impact.

The last two chapters were personally, the most interesting. Chapter eleven dealt with the Paradise story of Genesis and chapter twelve sifted between the truth and falsity of some narrations in the bible. These chapters contained novel exegeses and opened my mind to new ideas. The book is interesting and any curious seeker will find it helpful. The question-answer method breaks the monotony of explanation and keeps the reader involved. Fr Luke must be congratulated for this educative and catechetical work.

7 Top Tips From the Bible Business Woman Rahab for Today’s Woman of God

Rahab was a Bible woman entrepreneur who lived in the city of Jericho. She was a Cannanite who also operated an inn where visitors to the city (probably mostly men) would stay. She worked with flax, a type of fiber that was used for ropes and cloth. This woman of the Bible would have been in a non-traditional business for women during those days. You can find Rahab mentioned in several areas of the Bible but her main story is found in Joshua 2:1-22 and Matthew 1:5. Rahab was a quick thinking business woman who kept her ears open and communicated with her customers. This is how she learned vital information that eventually allowed her to save the life of two Israelite spies, which resulted in saving her own life and the life of her family when her homeland was captured.

Rahab’s story is a powerful one of a Bible business woman who experienced the grace of God in a dangerous situation because of her faith and wise actions. Even though she had been a prostitute, she had faith in God. As a result, she became the mother of Boaz, the Kinsman Redeemer, and eventually the mother-in-law of Ruth. Rahab was the great, great, great grandmother of King David and ancestor of Jesus Christ. She has much to share with the modern woman of God in business. Here are seven tips from the Bible woman, Rahab for today’s Christian business woman.

1. Succeed in spite of your past. Rahab was a woman who was given a negative label of prostitute in the Bible, probably for her lifestyle or other reasons that are not described. Still, she had the courage to successfully operate a non-traditional business and to face a dangerous situation by faith in God. Many women have experienced difficult situations in life. Some have been labeled with a negative reputation or called names that may or may not be deserved. Often, it could mean pulling back from society to avoid being hurt or ridiculed. But God is bigger than a title or a regretful past. If you have a calling on your life, don’t let a shaky past keep you from a successful future.

2. Learn to communicate with others. Rahab kept her ears and eyes open while operating her business. When customers came in she watched them; when they spoke she listened as much as needed. That is how she saved her life and the life of her family members. Business women must know how to watch and listen while doing business. Pay attention to others so you understand their professional needs and can gain necessary information for your business.

3. Gain negotiation skills. Rahab knew how to negotiate with tough soldiers and with spies in a life and death situation. Having operated a non-traditional business in her city, she had gained skills in making deals with all types of people. Business might require engaging in tough talks with competitors or adversaries. Practice the skills of making right deals so you will be ready to use them when necessary.

5. Be flexible and ready to change. Rahab could have tried to ignore the information she learned about the upcoming attack on her city or refused to believe that the army of the true God would succeed. Instead she quickly decided to change her comfortable life to respond to what was going to happen. A business woman of God should be flexible. She should be willing to make changes in her life and business according to the leading of God even when it first seems difficult to do.

6. Remember your priorities when things change. Rahab could have saved herself and never looked back. But she had her priorities in order; she remembered her family and saved all of them too. Very difficult circumstances can create a lot of stress. It is possible to forget your priorities during these times if you are not clear on your values. What would you do in the event of a highly stressful situation? A smart business woman thinks through various ways she can avoid being caught off-guard by unexpected events that can happen in business.

7. Use resources you have. Rahab used plants she had on her rooftop do what she promised in protecting the Israelite spies from capture by soldiers. What do you have around your location that might seem useless or without multiple uses? Take a new look at raw materials to see possible creative uses for them or consider creative marketing strategies to get business moving. You might have access to more inventory, ideas and potential than you first imagined to conduct your business in new ways.

Rahab is a woman of the Bible who went from living a life of sin to become one of the matriarchs of the Christian faith. She used strong business skills in a time of trouble and offers lessons for the modern business woman on how to think quickly when a bad situation seems almost impossible to overcome.

Truth and Consequences: Retelling the Great Bible Stories for Children

Have you ever wondered what possessed Eve to take the forbidden fruit after experiencing the amazing close and unhindered relationship with God? I can't say what was running through her mind, but I sometimes know what runs through mine when I disobey God. It basically comes down to me thinking I am better than God. Logically, I know this is a lie. However, because of my sin nature, the truth can be very difficult to grasp. But God demands we live by His truth. If we don't, there will always be consequences. Adam and Eve came to understand this and were issued several consequences for their act of disobedience. Here is a retelling of this great Bible story found in Genesis chapter 3 to help your children become familiar with this part of God's amazing Word …

Adam and Eve knew they had done the wrong thing when they chose to eat the fruit from the tree in the middle of the garden. God told them they were not allowed to eat this fruit, but they disobeyed and ate it anyway. Now they were afraid to see God – their best friend. Their fear made them try and hide from God among the trees in the garden. It was very silly for Adam and Eve to think they could hide from God. God knows where all His children are at all times. God knew where Adam and Eve were and He called out to them.

"Adam, where are you?"

Adam said, "God, I hear Your voice, but I am afraid and I am hiding."

God asked him, "Why are you afraid to be with me? Have you eaten the fruit I told you not to eat?"

Adam said, "Eve gave me some of the fruit and I ate it."

God must have been very sad at what Adam said. God knew his rules had been broken. God would have to make some changes so that they would learn how important it is to obey and love God.

First, God made changes to the serpent. He told the serpent that because he tricked the couple to disobey God, the serpent would never walk on legs again. Now the serpent would crawl on his belly like a snake. God also said that the serpent would hate Eve and all her children forever and ever.

Second, God made changes to Eve. He said that she would have a lot of trouble and pain in her life.

Third, God made changes to Adam. He told him that because He listened to his wife and disobeyed God's rules, he would have trouble in his life too. He would have to work very, very hard for all his food. And finally, one day, his body would die and return back to the dust from which God made it.

The fourth and final change was probably the hardest. God's first people could no longer live in the beautiful garden. They were sent away into the hard world. God placed angels at the entrance of the garden so that no one could ever go there again.

The changes God made were sad changes. But even though Adam and Eve had to leave the garden, God did not leave them. And He will never leave you, either.

Questions:

1. How did Adam and Eve disobey God? (Answer: They ate the fruit from the tree God told them not to eat from.)

2. Why did Adam and Eve try to hide from God? (Answer: They were afraid and felt ashamed / sad about what they did.)

3. What kind of change did God make to the serpent? (Answer: He would crawl on his belly and he would hate Eve and all her children forever.)

4. What kind of change did God make to Eve? (Answer: Eve would have a lot of trouble and pain in her life.)

5. What kind of change did God make to Adam? (Answer: He would have troubles in life and have to work very, very hard for his food.)

6. Could Adam and Eve stay in the garden? (Answer: No.)

7. Did God leave Adam and Eve? (Answer: No.)

Bible Verses For Christening Invitations – Which One is Best For Your Baby’s Baptism Invites?

You’re inviting guests to celebrate the first spiritual event in your child’s life. So, naturally, you’re looking for a suitable Bible verse to add to your baby’s christening invitations. Here are seven tips to help you find just the right one.

1. Browse christening invitation websites. Check their samples to see what Bible verses they feature on their baby baptism designs. It’s possible you might find what you’re looking for right away; a design you love, with the right wording and a great Scripture. One popular verse you will frequently see is, “every good and perfect gift is from above”, which is found in the Bible in James 1:17.

2. Check christening quotes. There are plenty of websites that offer tons of free quotations and sayings. Look in the baptism category for Bible verses. Scrapbooking websites often have great suggestions for titles, journaling and quotes in various categories. Plus, some online invitation companies include a page of suggested poems, sayings and Scripture that you can use.

3. Look it up. In the back of most Bibles is a concordance, which is like an index, although it is usually not as comprehensive. If you don’t find what you’re looking for there, you can check an online Scripture search engine, such as Bible Gateway. There, you can search by keyword and get a list of all the verses that contain that word.

But since the Bible does not specifically mention christening, it can be challenging to find an appropriate verse that way. If you look up “baptism”, for example, you will find in 1 Peter 3:21 it says, “Corresponding to that, baptism now saves you–not the removal of dirt from the flesh, but an appeal to God for a good conscience–through the resurrection of Jesus Christ.”

4. Use creative keywords. Instead of baptism or christening, look for Bible verses that include the word baby, child, born, guide, care, angels or love. If you do that, you’ll find gems like:

* Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you. Before you were born, I set you apart. (Jeremiah 1:5)

* I will be your God throughout your lifetime-until your hair is white with age. I made you, and I will care for you. I will carry you along and save you. (Isaiah 46:4)

* I prayed for this child, and the Lord has granted what I asked of Him ( Samuel 1:27)

5. Explore the Psalms. The book of Psalms in the Bible contains beautiful prayers, poems and praise that illustrate a life dedicated to God. There, you will find many appropriate verses that you can use, such as:

* Children are a gift from the Lord, a child is a reward from Him. (Psalm 127:3)

* You are the One who put me together inside my mother’s body, and I praise You because of the wonderful way You created me. Everything You do is marvelous! Of this I have no doubt. (Psalm 139:13-14)

* For He will give His angels charge concerning you, to guard you in all your ways. (Psalm 91:11)

6. Reread the Gospels. The words and life of Jesus are a great place to go for inspiration. Some possible examples of those Bible verses that would work on your invitations, include:

* Let the little children come unto Me, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these. (Luke 18:16)

* Whoever welcomes a child in My name, welcomes Me. (Luke 9:46-48)

* And He took the children in His arms, put His hands on them and blessed them. (Mark 10:16)

7. Jot down your favorite Bible verses. Once you’ve decided on the christening invitations you would like to use, picture which Scripture would work best. Make sure that the company you order from can customize the invites to include your preference.

Personalize your baby’s christening with a Bible verse that is meaningful to you. If you do a little searching, you will find a Scripture that touches your heart. You can be sure it will also inspire the guests that receive your child’s baptism invitations.

Old Testament History Revised – What If the Bible is Correct About History?

This article is the first in a series of articles that present the ideas of my print-on-demand book, “The Fourth Day: Why the Bible is Historically Accurate”.

When I was college student, I was introduced to the concept of biblical inerrancy. My pastor, Al Jackson of Lakeview Baptist Church in Auburn, Alabama, drove the point home that the Word of God, the Bible, was “God-breathed”. He explained that since the Bible was “God-breathed” it was created in the same manner as Adam when God breathed life into man in the book of Genesis. The Bible was designed, just like man was at creation, when God instructed over forty authors exactly what to write. The Bible was designed in the sense that the whole book’s purpose is the revelation of the messiah of mankind, Jesus Christ. The Bible points to Christ in very direct ways by giving the specific characteristics of his human life. The prophecies of the Old Testament indicated he would be born in Bethlehem, through the line of Jesse, and by a virgin. The spiritual aspects of Christ are alluded to in the symbols of the atonement sacrifices where animals were put on an altar and then sprinkled with salt, a symbol of eternity, to represent the once-and-for-all sacrifice that the Son of God would make on a cross one day. God coordinated all this information to point to Christ, God’s plan for man’s salvation.

Since the time that my pastor explained these things to me I have taken them to heart and I have studied the Bible with the attitude that the Bible is historically correct as well as spiritually correct. Conservative Christians have adopted this philosophy in every subject covered in the Bible except for one, chronology. Chronology, the study of the historical timeline, has been a subject where it seems the Christian community has conceded defeat. For whatever reason, Christians in the modern era have sought compromise with scholars, many of whom are downright antagonistic to Christian beliefs, so that the timeline of the Bible would have the stamp of authenticity from historians.

An article in Biblical Archaelogy Review effectively demonstrates the level of Biblical antagonism that archeological community can exhibit. Consider an excerpt from the opening paragraph of an article entitled Minimalists on Parade (Biblical Archaeology Review, Jan/Feb 2005, Vol 31, No. 1, Page 16-17): “At a recent conference on reconstructing Israelite history held in Rome, the so-called Biblical minimalist position was upheld by a number of prominent scholars. This position is not monolithic, however, and different minimalist scholars stressed different arguments. Among them:

*The Bible cannot be used as a historical source. [The position that defines a Biblical minimalist.]

*Neither can archaeology, which can only tell us whether ancient Israelites ate from a bowl 20 or 30 centimeters wide. A history of Israel based on archaeology is useless.

*There was no Exodus.

*The famous Tel Dan inscription mentioning David, excavated by Israeli archaeologist Avraham Biran, is probably a forgery; and the Hebrew words in the inscription that read “House [Dynasty] of David” probably mean something else.

*David and Solomon are only symbolic characters, not real characters.

*The Biblical accounts of the United Kingdom of Judah and Israel under David and Solomon are simply later projections into a distant mythic past.

*Judah did not even become a state until about a hundred years after David-if he lived.” One scholar mentioned in this article, Giovanni Garbini of the Universita’ di Roma La Sapienza, makes a particularly provocative comment in this article: “The name Jacob “is clearly an artificial creation of post-exilic age [after the Babylonian Exile]. It was not Jacob who became Israel, but Israel who became Jacob…”. These minimalists, who appear to represent the majority of the archaeological community, don’t regard the Bible as historically accurate. Among their objections: they don’t believe that David, Solomon or Jacob existed and don’t believe the Exodus ever occurred. These positions are as idealogically opposed to the conservative Christian view of the Bible as one can image. So why should we (Christians) seek the counsel of this group in the understanding of such a precious concept as the historical timeline of the Bible? Yet this is what has happened.

Here’s another problem with relying on the scientific community to authenticate the Bible: they have “rational” blinders on. Scientists that have no faith in Christ are limited in their ability to investigate because they assume that certain phenomena are impossible even before the investigation has begun. Since they consider themselves to be “rational” scientists the assumption that an “irrational” event has occurred is implausible. The scientific method basically allows anyone to make an assumption (any assumption), conduct research of known facts or run an experiment and use the research and/or the experiment to validate the assumption. These “rational” scientists when confronted with an “irrational” assumption simply leap over the research and experimental process and declare that the assumption in invalid because they have assumed the “irrational” assumption is just not possible. So why do these “rational” scientists behave this way? Well, consider the following possibility. Let’s say that an “irrational” event is assumed and information is collected or an experiment is performed to confirm its validity. Let’s say that the irrational event has been validated. What would be the response of the “rational” scientist? More than likely, complete denial. Such an outcome would create complete chaos in his philosophy since his “rational” method of investigation, the scientific method, would have been used to prove that an “irrational” event was possible. So what is an “irrational” event? It is just another way of saying a supernatural event, one that is beyond our understanding. Can the scientific process be used to validate an “irrational” event? Jesus Christ thought so. Jesus was explaining this idea of being “born again” to a Pharisee named Nicodemus in the New Testament (John 3:8): “The wind blows where it wishes, and you here its sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.” Nicodemus was clearly confused by this concept of being “born again” but Jesus was saying that even if you didn’t comprehend or believe this supernatural phenomenon could occur, just like something as intangible as the wind, there would be tangible evidence of it.

Certainly not all scientists believe in this manner, but the great majority of them do. How many of these scientists will view the Bible with no preconceived notions? When these scientists read in the Bible that the Earth was created in seven days they will not consider this as true because they have been trained that the universe is billions of years old. When these scientists read that a man lived to be 969 years old in the Bible they dismiss it as myth or fairy tale because men don’t currently live to be that old. They will not consider the possibility that at one time in history men did live that long. When these men read the account of Noah and a worldwide flood they have always attributed it to “local” flooding. This may have some ring of truth to it since until that time, according to the Bible, the world was one big land mass (the world was all in one place, i.e., local). According to the Bible the continents didn’t divide until the life of Peleg, a descendant of Noah. Again, the scientists certainly are not going to agree with this theory of the land mass shift because they will insist that this geological process needed millions of years to accommodate the movement of the continental land masses. Since these archeologists disagree with Christians in so many fundamental matters described in the Bible how will we ever reach an agreement on a historical timeline?

The present chronological model of the Bible is based on a mixture of Biblical truth and theoretical historical models. I believe it is time that we consider a new approach to Biblical chronology. The model I propose is based solely on the information in the Bible. If the Bible is true then historians will confirm the result of the theologians (assuming the theologians have interpreted the Bible correctly). Why should God’s Word have to be authenticated by men? If the Bible is truly trustworthy the truth of the Bible should be laid out for men to see and respond to its truth. In 1995 David Rohl, an Egyptologist, wrote his book A Test in Time to propose a radically different theory in chronology. He proposed a timeline that was based on some Biblical evidence. In fact, Rohl’s proposed date of Solomon’s reign is consistent with the timeline developed from my literal interpretation of the Bible. What is even more amazing about David Rohl is that he is described among archaeologists as a maximalist, someone who believes the Bible is historically accurate, yet he characterizes himself as a spiritual “agnostic”. If David Rohl is a maximalist then I am a “maximum” maximalist, someone significantly to the right of David Rohl’s view since I believe that the Bible is historically accurate and indeed the very word of God as it claims to be. Therefore I believe my perspective on the chronology of the Bible is unlike anything you have ever heard before.

The purpose of my book, “The Fourth Day: Why the Bible is Historically Accurate”, was to prove a biblical concept that I believe will synchronize the events recorded in the Bible with Egyptian history, Babylonian history, Persian history and Archaeology. The recognition of this concept will allow the reader to tie together all these areas of study in one neat package so that when viewed together there is no discrepancy between the Bible and these other elements of ancient history. The recognition of this concept will also illustrate that the Bible is not only a trustworthy religious document but a trustworthy historical document because of its chronological precision. First, assume that from the beginning of creation to the end of the millennial reign of Jesus Christ is a period of 7000 years; a time period analogous to the 7 day period of creation of the world mentioned in the book of Genesis. Next, recognize that the sacrifice of the Passover lamb in the Old Testament is symbolic of the fact that Jesus Christ was crucified exactly 4000 years after the creation of the world. According to the Mosaic Law each family that observed Passover was to purchase a lamb 4 days prior to the day of Passover and that lamb was to live in that household until the late afternoon of the day when the Israelite priest had to sacrifice the lamb and it was to be accomplished by nightfall. I believe these 4 days were God’s way of illustrating that the lamb of God, Jesus Christ, would be sacrificed on a cross 4000 years after the creation of the world. Therefore, symbolically and in actuality, Jesus Christ was sacrificed on the fourth day.

When you recognize this concept to be true, several significant conclusions regarding history become evident. The Israelite Monarchies of David and Solomon occurred about 180 years later than held by historians. The period of the Persian Empire from Cyrus the Great’s announcement of the rebuilding of Jerusalem until Alexander the Great’s invasion lasted only 21 years (not the approximately 200 year period currently held by historians). Egypt did not have a king (a Pharaoh) for 300 years between the 20th and 21st dynasties. I support these conclusions using the Bible, Astronomy, Archaeology, the writings of ancient historians and the monuments of ancient kings.

If you are a Christian I think you will like this idea. Here’s why. I am a devout believer in the inerrancy of the Bible. However I have noticed that the Conventional Chronology of the Bible, the timeline model of Biblical history taught in our Christian seminaries, doesn’t match the accounts of the Bible. For instance, how can the Persian Empire last 200 years when the book of Daniel indicates there were only 4 kings of Persia? If you are a Christian which explanation would you favor, the historian’s theories or the Biblical account? I choose to believe the Bible before I believe the historians.

If you are a fan of alternate views of history I believe you will be intrigued by this idea. The works of David Rohl (Pharoahs and Kings) and Peter James (Centuries of Darkness) are classics in the discussion of historical models that vigorously challenge ancient history. While I don’t agree with them completely much of this book supports many of their speculations and explains many of their observations. You will find my model of history to be extremely unique in its approach.

If you are a historian or archaeologist I believe you will like my ideas. Obviously historians and archaeologists work hand-in-hand, the archaeologist provides the “hard” evidence that supports the historian’s theory. This book provides the model to answer the following hard questions. Why is there virtually no evidence of the Persian Empire presence in Israel during the period of the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the Temple? Why is there half as much evidence of the presence of the Babylonian Empire in Israel as expected? Why is there no archaeological evidence of the “glory” of the reign of Solomon?

In the next installment of this series of articles I will address one of the most provocative discoveries of this approach to history; the discovery that the Persian Empire described in the book of Daniel only lasted for 21 years and not the 200 years claimed by historians.

The Benefits of a Large Print Bible

The Best Gift You Can Give Yourself or Someone You Love

Nowadays it feels like most everything in print is just too small. We can give our eyes a rest by choosing a large print Bible.

As we grow a bit older, our close up vision becomes a bit more strained. This does not mean that we cannot enjoy reading the Bible as often as we had in the past when our eyes were sharper.

Imagine Being Able to Read Right Along With the Pastor During Services!

Bibles that are specially crated with those of us who need a little more help these days making out the small print are great for home study groups, too. That’s because when you can actually read every word you can underline the important passages you are studying without missing a beat.

For people who have low vision, a large print Bible is a must. It can really help your sense of independence. You will be able to study God’s word at any time without bothering someone else to read for you.

The Freedom you Experience When You Use a Large Print Bible Can Shed Years!

Without having to squint, lean back and otherwise contort your head to read the Word, you will feel more relaxed and get much more enjoyment from your study time. You will look and feel younger again simply by not distorting your face when you read.

But a large type Bible is more than just something you take with you to church on Sunday. Any time you want to look up that favorite verse, or gain new understanding from a commentary you might have listened to, you would benefit from the large type – especially when you live alone.

Truth Be Told However, They Can be Hard to Find.

You’ll also find that large print study bibles are very useful for both personal and teaching purposes, too. But, finding the right bible for your purposes can be a huge, daunting task.

What to Look For In a Large Print Bible

First, consider which translation you are more comfortable reading. Ask yourself if you would like an illustrated version, or perhaps one that includes study chapters?

Consider where you will use it most. The NIV Large-Print Reference Bible is great for people on the go, in a convenient, easy-to-carry size.

If your bible reading will mostly be done in your home you may want to consider the Life Application Study Bible. This selection offers a bit more text, so it is a bit larger in size.

Many different versions include notes that will challenge readers to apply the truths of Scripture to everyday life. Some Bibles will include book introductions, in-text maps and charts, personality profiles, and topical indexes all in large, easy to read print.

And one of the last considerations is which language do you want to order? Having a Spanish Large Print Bible available will allow Spanish believers to have a format, in their own language that makes for easy reading.

Human Evolution Timeline: Bible Quote and Science

The human evolution timeline is found recorded in Bible quotes (Book of Genesis). Adam’s rib symbolizes the chromosome and is the key to the man ape evolution. In discussing evolution vs creation, many convergences like this one are found.

Someone who holds to the theory of evolution and denies creationism might ask why such an important matter as the creation of human beings would be in a symbolic message rather than in explicit language. And, after all, the Holy Scriptures don`t talk about chromosomes. That is a valid question, which shall be pursued below. First off, the main interest is to see the points of confluence between evolution and creation regarding the appearance of the human being.

Parallelism Between Adam’s Rib and Science

There is an amazing coincidence between the numbers in the Book of Genesis involving creationism and numbers in science regarding man’s evolution from the ape. The parallelism begins on the Bible quotes according to which God took out one of Adam’s ribs and made the woman, Eve, with it.

And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; and He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. Then the rib which the Lord God had taken from man He made into a woman, and He brought her to the man.

The number of ribs – Men have 24 ribs – 12 on each thoracic side. The same number is found in women. The text says that God removed one rib and not one pair of ribs. Had He indeed removed only one rib, man would have different numbers of this bone on each side of his chest. Not only that, but there would also remain a doubt about the number of ribs in a female.

These contradictions disappear if the text is examined from the standpoint of information conveyed by Jesus Christ to His disciples: To God nothing is impossible. God may have removed one of Adam’s ribs but He did it in such a way that the woman and all her descendants would have the same number of ribs. However, it is assumed that the rib’s removal is symbolic language and explained it cannot be regarded as direct language.

A look at it now from the standpoint of science. The chimpanzee, from which science now admits that man has evolved, has 24 chromosomes in its sexual cells, i. e., 24 chromosomes in each spermatozoon and 24 chromosomes in each ovulum. This is referred to gametes, those sex cells capable of reproducing the species. Therefore, the number of ribs in a man and of chromosomes in a chimpanzee are identical. The other cells in a chimp, as in a human, are diployd, that is, they have the chromosomes in pairs – therefore, they have 48 chromosomes.

Confluence of Book of Genesis and Human Evolution Timeline

Were we to admit that the rib symbolizes the chromosome, the implicit and explicit Bible numbers say that God removed a chromosome from a chimpanzee and made a woman out of it. In other words, the “man”, a chimp, lost a sex-cell chromosome and thus a woman was formed.

Indeed, the woman, just like the man, has one chromosome less than a chimp in the sex cells. The human spermatozoon has 23 chromosomes and the human ovulum also has 23 chromosomes. It makes sense. The other cells in the human being are diployd, i. e., they have 46 chromosomes. But it is needed to see what science says regarding the man ape evolution, that is, man’s evolution from the chimpanzee.

Man’s evolution from the ape – It is admitted that, in the evolution of the species, through some unknown phenomenon, two chimp chromosomes were fused and thus, primitive man, a hominid, came about. Some theories claim that the female came first, which, if true, would give further consistency to the symbolic version of Adam and Eve’s story.

In a nutshell, this is what the matter has:

  • Number of ribs in the human being: 24.
  • Number of chromosomes in the chimp’s gametes: 24.
  • Creation: removal of one rib.
  • Evolution: fusion of two chromosomes.
  • Rib symbolizes chromosome.
  • Removal of one rib = fusion of two chromosomes.
  • Number of chromosomes resulting in the gametes: 23 – New species: man, hominid.

Without wandering too far from these basic issues, it should be asked why there are so many differences between human and chimp, given the “simple” fusion of two chromosomes. Furthermore, those in favor of creationism would argue that, since the similarity between a chimp’s DNA and that of a human being is above 98%, humans and chimpanzees ought to be more alike. These are pertinent questions which must be carefully examined.

Starting with the numbers: the difference between human and chimp DNA is less than 2%. For three reasons, this percentage can be very meaningful:

the science is just barely beginning to understand the human genome, that is, the DNA map, that of genes and each one’s role. On the other hand, we know also little about the chimp genome. Thus, it is perfectly acceptable that this percentage, though small, means much in terms of anatomical and physiological differences between the species;

the differences may be situated in fundamental parts of the DNA, enough to cause the differences between the species;

the amount of DNA in the cells is not always proportional to their complexity. Therefore, the arrangement of DNA components in humans may be more important than the quantity.

Thus, the slightly less than 2% difference between chimps and humans may become more meaningful. The “simple” fusion of one species’ two chromosomes may cause many differences in the resulting species.

Why is the Bible not explicit? – In other words, why, since the issue was raised in the beginning of this article, does the Biblical message not speak directly about chromosomes? At least two answers are possible.

The first has to do with Christian and Jewish dogma: this is a sacred text, dictated or inspired by God, and there is no questioning how God speaks. The second has to do with the Biblical writers: they would be human beings possessing a deep knowledge of evolution timeline and humans nature. They knew that it would not be possible to write what men would not understand at that time (existence of chromosomes, genes, DNA). They further knew that, in a patriarchal society such as the one they lived in, women should remain in a secondary role, in the written version, to make the acceptance of God’s word easier.

The faithful cling to the first answer, the dogma.

But those who are not faithful may properly ask how those writers, barely out of a semi-nomadic life, could possess such knowledge about the evolution of the species.

Examined as a book and without any preconceived position, the Bible is a singular book and its writers differed from common mortals. However, as intelligent as they might have been, there was no way they could have held such knowledge. Thus the answer is: this is a mystery.

Book of Genesis & Science: More convergence

In the pleasant study of Biblical numbers involving creation vs. evolution, there are other convergent points. Example: part of the sacred text reproduced at the beginning of this article and science’s version of the differences in man/ape. The Genesis expression “closed up the flesh in its place” conveys a special meaning and suggests more parallelisms between religion and science. It could be read as “closed up the frontal lobe in its place”.

In the monkeys the frontal lobe is 9% of the brain. In the man it is 30%. The frontal lobe is a tissue (“flesh”), a nervous tissue. The frontal lobe integrates most of the brain functions. Its prefrontal portion is related to the initiation of planned actions, i.e., thinking, idealizing, acting in orderly fashion, and letting out emotional expressions. In the difference is the “closed up the flesh in its place.”

Subsequent Procreation

The appearance of the human being raises the issue of procreation. In the history of creation, this problem does not exist: once created, Adam and Eve started to reproduce. However, in evolution, ONE individual, from the fusion of the two chromosomes, would not give origin to the human species.

To illustrate,suppose that the fusion of the two chromosomes took place in a female, resulting in 23 chromosomes in the gametes, living with males bearing 24 chromosomes in the gametes. Procreation would be impossible. Even if they copulated, no ovulum would be formed due to the lack of symmetry in the DNA. How, then, would the human being have procreated in evolution?

More likely the phenomenon – physical, chemical or physical-chemical – had by then reached several individual chimps, causing chromosome fusion in many of them, both males and females. In the history of evolution, there is still another peculiarity: the bonobos have more elements than the chimpanzees to be man’s ancestors.

Chimpanzees vs Bonobos

Preference for the chimpanzees over the bonobos – In the evolutionary scale, science shows preference for the chimpanzees over the bonobos, even though the latter are more similar to human beings.

See some ones:

the similarity percentage between bonobos’ DNA and humans’ is greater than that of chimpanzees;

their genitals are more protuding and face forward, as with humans;

except for humans, they are the only primates who copulate from the front;

they engage in homosexual and heterosexual relations;

upon reaching adolescence, the females abandon their group and join another one. In their new group they submit themselves to the female – including sexually – and then copulate with the males;

the females keep together in groups and the male respects them because, together, they will fight him for food;

they stand on two legs more frequently than chimps do and their laughter is more expressive. They are also more cordial in the group.

Despite all this, it is believed that man has evolved from chimps, due to the fact that they are found in many African regions, in wide-open areas, which would have favored their territorial dispersion. Bonobos, on the other hand, live in closed-in woods, in some regions in Africa. However, from the genetic, anatomic, emotional and behavioral standpoints, more likely the human species has come from the bonobos. Perhaps, after their community was hard-hit by a cataclysm, they took refuge in closed-in woods.

Man’s Ancestor: Neither Chimpanzee nor Bonobos and Adam`s Rib

Another theory admits that chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, orangutangs, gibbons, all belong to the primate family known as Pongid, just like the Hominid family, whose sole representative is man, all belonging to the Hominoids super family, and would have come from individuals known as Old World Monkeys.

It is possible that some violent environmental change hit Africa and Asia, altering the genetic structure of many Old World Monkeys (Cercopitecoids) sometime between six million and twenty-five million years ago. Different Pongids came into being.

Why would not different hominids have appeared? Present day human must have featured differences among individuals from the very beginning. For instance, there must have appeared at the same time individuals with white skin and with black skin in Africa and in Asia. Weather conditions and the fight for survival would have made easier for white-skinned individuals to disappear from Africa and for black-skinned individuals to disappear from ice-cold regions.

The theory of a common trunk for all Hominoids does not change the parallel with Adam’s rib. The whole Hominoid super family would have come from individuals with 24 chromosomes in the gametes. One family (Pongid) continued with 24 chromosomes in the gametes while another (Hominid) appeared with 23 chromosomes.

How to Play Bible Baseball

Have you been to a baseball game lately? No? Then start a game of your own – Bible Baseball style!

Set Up: You will need 4 bases – one home plate, one 1st base, one 2nd base, and one 3rd base. You will also need one card of each of the following titles – Home run, Single, Double, and Triple. Place the bases on the ground in baseball diamond fashion and place the cards in a bucket.

How to Play: Pick one child from each team. Decide who goes first. Give the child a Bible review question. If he/she gets it correct, they now get the chance to pick a card out of the bucket. If they pick the single card they move to first base, the double card moves them to second base, the triple card moves them to third base and the Home Run card gives them an automatic home run. Place the chosen card back into the bucket. At this point of the game, both teams have had their first players “up to bat”.

The second child from the 1st team goes next and follows the same procedure. Whatever card he/she picks will also move ahead any of his team members that are already on another base. For example, if a Team A child is on 2nd base and another Team A child comes “up to bat” and picks a double card, the first Team A child now goes to Home plate and scores a run for their team while his teammate goes to second base.

The team with the most home runs at the end of your Bible review time wins.

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