Search
-
Subscribe to Blog Updates
GoodReads Feed
LibraryThing Feed
Archives
- October 2024 (4)
- September 2024 (4)
- August 2024 (4)
- July 2024 (5)
- June 2024 (5)
- May 2024 (5)
- April 2024 (3)
- March 2024 (5)
- February 2024 (3)
- January 2024 (5)
- December 2023 (4)
- November 2023 (4)
- October 2023 (5)
- September 2023 (4)
- August 2023 (4)
- July 2023 (5)
- June 2023 (4)
- May 2023 (5)
- April 2023 (5)
- March 2023 (3)
- February 2023 (4)
- January 2023 (6)
- December 2022 (4)
- November 2022 (4)
- October 2022 (4)
- September 2022 (4)
- August 2022 (5)
- July 2022 (4)
- June 2022 (4)
- May 2022 (5)
- April 2022 (5)
- March 2022 (3)
- February 2022 (4)
- January 2022 (5)
- December 2021 (4)
- November 2021 (4)
- October 2021 (5)
- September 2021 (4)
- August 2021 (5)
- July 2021 (4)
- June 2021 (4)
- May 2021 (5)
- April 2021 (5)
- March 2021 (4)
- February 2021 (4)
- January 2021 (5)
- December 2020 (4)
- November 2020 (4)
- October 2020 (4)
- September 2020 (5)
- August 2020 (4)
- July 2020 (4)
- June 2020 (4)
- May 2020 (5)
- April 2020 (5)
- March 2020 (4)
- February 2020 (4)
- January 2020 (5)
- December 2019 (4)
- November 2019 (5)
- October 2019 (4)
- September 2019 (5)
- August 2019 (4)
- July 2019 (5)
- June 2019 (4)
- May 2019 (4)
- April 2019 (5)
- March 2019 (4)
- February 2019 (4)
- January 2019 (5)
- December 2018 (4)
- November 2018 (4)
- October 2018 (4)
- September 2018 (5)
- August 2018 (4)
- July 2018 (5)
- June 2018 (4)
- May 2018 (5)
- April 2018 (5)
- March 2018 (4)
- February 2018 (4)
- January 2018 (5)
- December 2017 (4)
- November 2017 (5)
- October 2017 (4)
- September 2017 (4)
- August 2017 (5)
- July 2017 (5)
- June 2017 (4)
- May 2017 (5)
- April 2017 (4)
- March 2017 (4)
- February 2017 (5)
- January 2017 (4)
- December 2016 (4)
- November 2016 (5)
- October 2016 (4)
- September 2016 (4)
- August 2016 (5)
- July 2016 (4)
- June 2016 (4)
- May 2016 (5)
- April 2016 (4)
- March 2016 (8)
- January 2016 (1)
- November 2015 (2)
- October 2015 (2)
- September 2015 (2)
- August 2015 (1)
- July 2015 (2)
- June 2015 (2)
- May 2015 (3)
- April 2015 (1)
- November 2014 (2)
- August 2014 (1)
- June 2014 (3)
- May 2014 (1)
- October 2013 (1)
- November 2012 (1)
- October 2012 (1)
- August 2012 (1)
- July 2012 (1)
- March 2012 (2)
- May 2011 (1)
- January 2010 (1)
- June 2009 (1)
- April 2009 (1)
- February 2009 (2)
- September 2008 (1)
- June 2008 (1)
- May 2008 (2)
- April 2008 (6)
- March 2008 (1)
- February 2008 (3)
- January 2008 (1)
- October 2007 (3)
- September 2007 (4)
- August 2007 (3)
- May 2007 (4)
- April 2007 (3)
- March 2007 (1)
- February 2007 (1)
- December 2006 (2)
- October 2006 (2)
- September 2006 (1)
- August 2006 (3)
- July 2006 (31)
- June 2006 (5)
- May 2006 (6)
- April 2006 (8)
- March 2006 (4)
- February 2006 (4)
- January 2006 (1)
- December 2005 (2)
- October 2005 (3)
- September 2005 (5)
- August 2005 (8)
- July 2005 (3)
- June 2005 (5)
- May 2005 (5)
- April 2005 (5)
- March 2005 (6)
Categories
- Genres (527)
- Bibliography (1)
- Essays (5)
- Introduction (14)
- Journal entry (1)
- Life (1)
- Life updates (56)
- Lists (2)
- Node hub (10)
- Project updates (59)
- Site updates (60)
- Slice of life (1)
- Thought (4)
- Weeknotes (382)
- Statuses (26)
- In progress (2)
- Old site (24)
- Topics (615)
- 360-degree camera (4)
- Abstract expressionism (1)
- Aesthetics (13)
- AI (58)
- Akelos (1)
- Analysis (8)
- Anime (5)
- Apartment (21)
- Apologetics (11)
- Aromatherapy (1)
- Art (15)
- Audio description (2)
- Audio sermons (3)
- Beliefs report (42)
- Bible (3)
- Bible reading plans (7)
- Biography (1)
- Birthdays (14)
- Blog (19)
- Blood tests (11)
- Board games (19)
- Bookmarks (2)
- Books (80)
- Brexit (2)
- Burns (1)
- Business (11)
- Car (14)
- Career (5)
- Caring (4)
- Chapel (7)
- Childhood mysteries (1)
- Chocolate (1)
- Christianity (8)
- Christmas labels (42)
- Church (10)
- Clothes (11)
- Coding project generator (55)
- Coffee (25)
- Cognitive science (14)
- Comics (18)
- Communication (1)
- Computers (9)
- Conceptual modeling (36)
- Conferences (1)
- Conspiracy theories (2)
- Conventions (1)
- Cooking (48)
- Coping (5)
- Correspondence (1)
- COVID-19 (17)
- Credit card fraud (2)
- Current events (11)
- Daily routine (31)
- Death (22)
- Depression (2)
- Devotions (5)
- Diet (38)
- Discovery (1)
- Doctor Who (7)
- Drawing (2)
- Drone Music – Wikipedia (4)
- Drupal (2)
- Dusk (12)
- Earthquakes (1)
- Ebooks (5)
- Elections (6)
- Epistemology (1)
- Evangelism (1)
- Exercise (22)
- Existential crisis (2)
- Experimental literature (10)
- Fiction (74)
- Firefox (1)
- Focus (2)
- Freelancing (6)
- French horn (5)
- Fringe theories (5)
- Functional programming (1)
- Fundraising (1)
- Futurism (30)
- Gadgets (2)
- Gardening (1)
- GDPR (3)
- General (63)
- Goal map (5)
- Grad school (7)
- Gregg Shorthand (7)
- GTD (4)
- Haircuts (1)
- Hardware (8)
- Health (58)
- Hermeneutics (1)
- Heuristic (1)
- History (2)
- Holidays (78)
- Housekeeping (53)
- HP Lovecraft (1)
- IMEEM (1)
- Immanuel prayer (5)
- IT (1)
- Journaling (1)
- Jury duty (2)
- Knowledge representation (7)
- Learning (29)
- Life maintenance (74)
- Life management (17)
- Life Model (1)
- Liminal spaces (5)
- Livestreams (4)
- Map magnets (2)
- Math (4)
- Math relearning (71)
- Meetups (5)
- Memory (25)
- Mining Ancient Thought (1)
- Money (40)
- Movies (93)
- Music (64)
- Music composition (10)
- Music theory (3)
- Naps (2)
- Narratology (1)
- Nature (68)
- Nostalgia box (17)
- Nutrition (3)
- OBAC (5)
- OpenLaszlo (1)
- Painting (1)
- Party games (1)
- Patterns (1)
- People (73)
- People skills (10)
- Personal development (7)
- Personality (1)
- Philosophy (12)
- Photography (10)
- Podcasts (20)
- Politics (26)
- Problem solving (1)
- Productivity (177)
- Programming (104)
- Project management (12)
- Projects (37)
- Psychology (7)
- Public coding guide (10)
- Reading (6)
- Reading strategies (1)
- Reason (1)
- Religion (2)
- Research (3)
- Revelation (1)
- Scanners (2)
- Sculpture (1)
- Service (1)
- Shoes (1)
- Shoutouts (1)
- Skill development (3)
- Sleep (54)
- Social issues (13)
- Software development (9)
- Solar eclipse (6)
- Soundscapes (4)
- Space (19)
- Spirituality (73)
- Stephen Ministry (2)
- Stormwater management (4)
- Sustainability (10)
- Systems theory (2)
- Task tracking (2)
- Taxes (9)
- Tea (11)
- Text-to-speech (3)
- The Thinkulum (5)
- Theology (4)
- Thinking (19)
- Transferrable concepts (1)
- Travel (14)
- Tutoring (1)
- TV (67)
- Twitter (2)
- Video games (31)
- Videos (18)
- VR (2)
- Walks (1)
- Website (6)
- Weddings (2)
- Weird stuff (11)
- Wiki (6)
- Willpower (1)
- WordPress (2)
- Work (31)
- Worship performing (18)
- Writing (27)
- Genres (527)
Category Archives: Spirituality
Update for 3/13/2016, part 3
This is the last part of an initial weekly update on my site, my projects, and my life. Part 1 is here, and part 2 is here. Future updates will usually only take up one post. Life updates Drawing Nearer … Continue reading
Posted in Birthdays, Board games, Freelancing, Health, Life updates, People, Spirituality, Video games
4 Comments
90 days through the Bible
This past Thursday I finished listening through the Bible using my 90-day reading plan from last year. I began on Saturday, February 12. The audio Bible I listened to was The Bible Experience, which I highly recommend. I don’t remember exactly why I began listening when I did, maybe because I felt I needed more spiritual input, but as I progressed I found more reasons to be doing it.
Once in college I tried reading the Bible in large chunks, and it was much easier to observe the large scale themes that way. Unfortunately, I didn’t get very far before giving up, probably somewhere in the Kings, which is where I usually stop. This time I knew I could finish the whole Bible, because I’d done it before, and I wanted to see how well the themes emerged at this rapid rate.
I also wanted to see if it was a reasonable reading plan. I found that it was, in the sense that I didn’t feel too burdened by it. It helped that I was listening rather than reading. I’m sure I would have gotten behind if I’d had to set aside time to read, but I typically have the listening time I needed, about half an hour per day. I listened at twice the normal speed, since this production was read slowly, at about half the rate of normal speech. I actually could have finished the Bible in fewer than 90 days, because some days I could have listened a lot longer, but I wanted to stick to the schedule to get a true sense of the reading plan.
Another reason for trying out this reading plan is that I wanted to get a better handle on the overall structure and contents of the Bible. I grew up in the church, and so I knew the basics and a lot of the details, but the Bible still had plenty of parts I didn’t know well because I hadn’t spent much time in them.
The only other time I’d gotten through the whole Bible, I was listening to the NIV Audio Bible Dramatized, which I do not recommend. I had arranged the chapters in roughly chronological order, which I also don’t recommend, because it was jarring and confusing to flip between books and time frames without warning or explanation. This time I wanted to listen in plain vanilla canonical order in hopes that it would make more sense, which it did.
When I first created my reading plan, one or two people said they’d rather read the Bible slowly and take time to reflect on it. Normally I would too, and whipping through it definitely had disadvantages to go along with the benefits. The litany of kings got confusing, and I certainly didn’t have time to ponder all the proverbs.
Listening to the Bible rather than reading it also gave mixed results. On one hand, hearing each word spoken gives them all an emphasis they don’t have when your eyes are flying across them on the page, so I noticed things that had escaped my attention before. For example, I had never noticed Jacob’s angel sighting in Genesis 32:1.
On the other hand, if your attention strays during a recording or a public reading and you miss things, it’s harder to go back and pick them up than if your eyes can freely wander the passage. People sometimes say the Bible was written to be heard rather than read, and that may be true in some ways, but surely the more intricate parts of the Bible, such as Paul’s letters, need to be seen and studied in written form.
Some other random things I noticed:
- The OT is even more violent than I remembered. The sound effects helped there. The Bible Experience doesn’t hold back.
- I had my epistemology glasses on, paying attention to how knowledge happened in the Bible. I was surprised to hear how often God’s chosen leaders and prophets turned out to be wrong in their disputes with other people (e.g., Lev. 10:16-20). I always assumed they were supposed to have all the answers.
- Isaiah is very confusing because it jumps from topic to topic and doesn’t give much context, but the other prophets are much less confusing.
- I don’t know what it’s like for Jewish readers, but to me Isaiah 53 stuck out like a rose bed in a field of grass. My immediate reaction was to ask myself why we needed the NT at all after that. The foreshadowing of Christian theology in that chapter is striking.
- Before this run through the Bible, I didn’t remember the whole section of Jeremiah devoted to the people who returned from the exile.
- I didn’t remember just how much measuring Ezekiel’s prophecy of the future temple involved.
- Among the prophets, I especially liked Daniel because it was directed at Israel’s oppressors for a change rather than Israel itself, on top of being interesting, weird, and largely narrative.
- I found that I was less familiar with Luke’s accounts than with Matthew and Mark’s versions of the same events. It was refreshing to hear his “new” take on things.
- The epistles really are a different animal from the rest of the Bible. They’re more personal and open up a lot of new themes.
- Balaam, Cain, and Sodom seem to have been turned into the early church’s symbols for everything that’s wrong with the world. They show up as warnings in several of the epistles.
- Hebrews, James, and 1 John form a nice almost-bookend to the Bible. Hebrews: All those sacrifices in the old covenant? Jesus is better. James: All those things Scripture’s been telling you to do? Do them. 1 John: Love–it’s what it’s all about. And of course, it’s hard to imagine a better bookend than Revelation.
I found the prophets depressing, because Israel and Judah were so stubborn and because I felt the prophets’ threats of doom overwhelmed any hope they offered. I worried that God might not have really been just and that he had no qualms about sweeping away the righteous with the wicked. Thank goodness for Malachi 3:16-18, where God specifically addresses this question. Still, I struggled. This is one place where reading more slowly might have served me better, because I could have lingered on the prophecies of restoration.
I breathed a sigh of relief when I got to the Gospels. I breathed a bigger one when I got to the epistles. They encouraged me. The prophets were writing to stiff-necked people who were headed for judgment. But with the Gospels at last I was back to a message written for people who actually wanted to follow God. Jesus had plenty of harsh things to say, but the balance between that and the messages of restoration was greater. And the epistles were even more encouraging, because more than any other books, they dealt with how to handle suffering, and they injected it with hope and dignity.
Posted in Bible, Essays, Reading, Spirituality
Leave a comment
Spirituality Introduction
This post has moved here.
Posted in Introduction, Old site, Spirituality
Comments Off on Spirituality Introduction