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The Essential Bible Dictionary is Now Part of Bible Gateway Plus!

Essential Bible DictionaryThe Essential Bible Dictionary is now a part of the Bible Gateway Plus study library! It joins four Bible dictionaries and dozens of other Bible study resources as part of the Bible Gateway Plus Bible learning toolkit.

If you’re a Bible Gateway Plus member, you now have full access to this book as you read Scripture. (Click here for a step-by-step guide to accessing this and other Bible Gateway Plus titles.)

What does The Essential Bible Dictionary bring to your Bible reading and learning? Its key feature is its accessibility: it’s a dictionary of Bible characters, places, and themes, but this isn’t a stuffy academic tome that requires a degree in theology to understand. On the contrary, it’s written to help everyday Bible readers and students of all levels better understand what they’re reading.

Here’s what you’ll find in The Essential Bible Dictionary:

  • Detailed breakdowns of thousands of Bible names and terms.
  • Explanations of themes and concepts in the Bible that go beyond simple word definitions.
  • Extensive cross-references to make it easy to understand how terms are used throughout all of the Bible.

The result is a Bible dictionary ideal for everyday use—personal devotions, Bible study groups, family Scripture reading, etc.—but which is also holds up as a companion for sermon preparation, school research, and other more demanding exercises.

The Essential Bible Dictionary brings the number of Bible dictionaries available in the Bible Gateway Plus library to five. Here are the other four dictionaries:

  • Mounce’s Complete Expository Dictionary
  • Zondervan Illustrated Bible Dictionary
  • New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology
  • Olive Tree Names of God Dictionary

And beyond these dictionaries, there are dozens of study Bibles, commentaries, and other digital reference books. Here’s a complete list of titles available to Bible Gateway Plus members.

How to Access The Essential Bible Dictionary if You’re a Bible Gateway Plus Member

If you’re a Plus member, this title is already in your library—just log in to your Bible Gateway account, look up any Bible passage, and find The Essential Bible Dictionary in your study library panel. You’ll find it alongside the other dictionaries in your library. (Click here if you need a refresher course on accessing your study library.)

If you want to jump right in, click here to read Genesis 1 with The Essential Bible Dictionary open alongside the Bible text.

How to Access The Essential Bible Dictionary if You’re Not Yet a Bible Gateway Plus Member

If you’re not yet a Bible Gateway Plus member, you can still get full access to this digital dictionary (along with 40+ other digital study titles) free for 30 days when you start your free 30-day trial of Bible Gateway Plus. Try it and see for yourself how The Essential Bible Dictionary makes it easier to read and understand the Bible! Click here to start your risk-free trial of Bible Gateway Plus, and find out why we call Bible Gateway Plus the best value in digital Bible study.

How to Heal from Rejection: An Interview with Lysa TerKeurst

Lysa TerKeurstRejection can be crippling. Cruel words spoken in mockery or being mercilessly shunned can create wounds that dig deep into our sense of self, and can resurface in surprising ways as an adult. But this doesn’t have to be the end of the story.

In this Bible Gateway Q&A, Lysa TerKeurst (@LysaTerKeurst) talks about her book, Uninvited: Living Loved When You Feel Less Than, Left Out and Lonely (Thomas Nelson, 2016).

[Join the Uninvited Online Bible Study with Lysa TerKeurst teaching from the Holy Land on StudyGateway August 20 – September 30. Registration is open now and you get free access to 6 videos and other downloads]

Buy your copy of Uninvited in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

Why did you write Uninvited?

Lysa TerKeurst: Rejection isn’t just a complicated emotion. It’s an utter devastation of what we thought was real and safe and secure. And, it affects us all way more than we’d like to admit. We’re all either trying to heal from a past rejection, deal with a present rejection, or fear that an unexpected rejection is just around the corner.

So, this book is about finding the acceptance and love we’ve always longed for and starting to pick up the pieces that we’ve been trying to put back together for years. I chose this topic because I want us to dig in to the core of who we are and expose—and finally heal—rejection’s deep infection.

It’s not a tidy process. But it’s honest. And it’s good.

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, How to Know When to Say Yes: An Interview with Lysa TerKeurst]

Describe your own fear of abandonment.

Lysa TerKeurst: Being abandoned and losing my identity weren’t words I would have used when I was a little girl. But I definitely experienced those fears.

My home life felt very unpredictable when I was young. I had a dad who never wanted a girl, while I was desperate to be a treasured daughter. That’s a hard equation for which there’s no easy answer.

My greatest fear was that he would one day stop coming home and I’d be no father’s daughter. I vividly remember whispering in the dark of night over and over, “God, don’t let my daddy leave me. Just don’t let him leave.”

And my dad fed my fears every day. He’d use the word divorce as if it were his freedom pass — not just from my mom but from me as well. He thought it no big deal to say whatever he felt. But because his words carried such weight for me, every threat of divorce was death breathing down my neck. Because if he did leave, then who would I be? A girl without a daddy felt to me like a girl without a place in this world. After all, if he couldn’t love me, who would ever love me?

When my dad finally did stop coming home, the last bit of what held together my security and identity splintered as he packed his things without so much as looking at me. Rejection settled deep into my heart. And I came to one earth-shattering conclusion: “I don’t matter. I am worth nothing to my dad.” And even more disturbing: “I fear I am worth nothing to God.” The sum of these feelings became my new identity. Who was Lysa? The unwanted one.

How should ideas of rejection projected onto to others be avoided?

Lysa TerKeurst: So many times we assign thoughts to others that they never actually think. We hold them accountable to harsh judgments they never make. And we own a rejection from them they never gave us. This is why we have to choose to “live loved.” It’s a phrase I saw an author friend of mine write in a book she was signing. Live loved. Not only an instruction, but a proclamation.

It’s settling in your soul, I was created by a God who formed me because he so very much loved the very thought of me. When I was nothing, he saw something and declared it good. Very good. And very loved.

This should be the genesis thought of every new day: I am loved.

How do we stop the cycle of rejection?

Lysa TerKeurst: I’ve discovered great power in two simple phrases: “me too” and “you do belong.”

We need to let our past rejection experiences work for us instead of against us by allowing them to help us sense the possible pain behind other people’s reactions. We can try to see things from their vantage point and think of how they might be hurting in this situation. Pretty much everyone has at some point been deeply hurt by someone. That’s our “me too.”

We can also make a list of good things we know to be true about the person who’s hurt us. This doesn’t validate their actions in the moment, but it’ll validate their worth as a person. Even if we’re clueless about the past hurts that could be feeding their reaction, we can still be sensitive to their obvious pain. We can be an agent of grace in their life as we whisper, “You do belong.”

Doing these things and choosing to cooperate with God’s grace will help us stop the cycle of rejection and hurt. In other people’s lives. And in our own.

In the Holy Land, what were the lessons you learned as you considered the olive trees there?

Lysa TerKeurst: Jesus often met in the shadow and shade of the olive tree. Jesus knew the crushing heart feeling. He felt it. He wrestled with it. He carried it. And I don’t think it was a coincidence the olive tree was in the Garden of Gethsemane in the moment of deep sorrow for Jesus.

The olive tree is such a picture of why our hearts must go through the crushing times.

First, in order to be fruitful it has to have both the dry, hot desert east wind and the rain-filled Mediterranean west wind. The olive tree needs both of these winds to produce fruit… and so do we. We need both the winds of hardship and winds of relief to sweep across our life if we’re to truly be fruitful.

Another thing to consider about the olive tree is how naturally bitter the olive is and what it must go through to be useful: waiting, washing, breaking, soaking, sometimes salting, and waiting some more. It’s a lengthy process to be cured of bitterness.

The final thing is not just how bitter it is, but also how strong and hard it is when picked straight from the tree. It needs a hard rain of at least two-to-three hours so the water can make it all the way up the roots, through the tree, and to the olives.

And the best way to preserve an olive for the long run? Crush it and extract the oil from it.

The same is true for us. The biblical way to be preserved is to be pressed. And being pressed can certainly feel like being crushed. Crushing is the way of preservation for the olive. It’s also the way to get what’s most valuable, the oil, out of the olive. Keeping this perspective is how we can be troubled on every side yet not distressed; pressed to the point of being crushed but not crushed and destroyed (2 Corinthians 4:8).

When the sorrowful winds of the east blow, I forget they’re necessary. When I’m being processed, I forget it’s for the sake of ridding me of bitterness. And when I’m being crushed I forget it’s for the sake of my preservation.

I forget all these things so easily. I wrestle and cry and honestly want to resist every bit of this. Maybe God knew we all would. And so, he created the olive tree.

[Join the Uninvited Online Bible Study with Lysa TerKeurst teaching from the Holy Land on StudyGateway August 20 – September 30. Registration is open now and you get free access to 6 videos and other downloads]


Bio: Lysa TerKeurst is the president of Proverbs 31 Ministries and The New York Times bestselling author of Uninvited: Living Loved When You Feel Less Than, Left Out and Lonely and The Best Yes: Making Wise Decisions in the Midst of Endless Demands. She writes from her sticky farm table and lives with her family in North Carolina. Connect with her at www.LysaTerKeurst.com or on social media @LysaTerKeurst.

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Biblical Preaching Expert Haddon Robinson Dies at 86

Dr. Haddon RobinsonHaddon Robinson of Willow Valley, Pennsylvania, the respected author and seminary president who literally wrote the book on biblical expositional preaching, died July 22. He was 86. A memorial service to celebrate Dr. Robinson’s life is scheduled for September 7, 2017 at 7:00 pm at the chapel of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in South Hamilton, Massachusetts.

Read Dr. Robinson’s funeral home obituary.

Author of numerous books on biblical preaching and Christian living, Dr. Robinson was the longtime Harold John Ockenga Distinguished Professor of Preaching, and former president of, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. Formerly he served 12 years as president of Denver Conservative Baptist Seminary, now Denver Seminary, and 19 years on the faculty of Dallas Theological Seminary.

Buy your copy of Biblical Preaching: The Development and Delivery of Expository Messages in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

For more than 23 years, Robinson lead the conversation about biblical topics on the radio program Discover the Word which posted a video tribute to him on its Facebook page. From the archives of Discover the Word, here is the 10-minute episode with Dr. Robinson focusing on How to Read the Bible for All It’s Worth.

In a 1996 interview with Reformed Worship magazine, Dr. Robinson said, “Great sermons take place when flint strikes steel. When the flint of a person’s problem strikes the steel of the Word of God, you get a spark, and the spark will burn. Some sermons are too “flinty”: they’re all problem, and not much Scripture. Others are all steel and no flint: they are strong on the Bible but stop short of challenging people’s lives. What we want is some combination of the eternal Word of God striking people where they live. Preachers who can do that have a better chance of reaching the audience today and in years to come.”

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Summarizing Scripture’s Narrative: The Story of the Bible in 5 Minutes

The Bible Project (@JoinBibleProj) makes animated videos that walk through the structure of every book of the Bible and videos that explain biblical themes that weave through the entire narrative of Scripture.

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, The Bible Project: An Interview with Tim Mackie and Jon Collins]

This 5-minute Bible Project video displays how the Bible is one unified story that leads to Jesus and his salvation for the modern world:

[Read Bible Gateway Blog posts that introduce you to the Bible]

[Browse the Bible Handbooks section in the Bible Gateway Store where you’ll enjoy low prices every day]

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Bible News Roundup – Week of July 23, 2017

Read this week’s Bible Gateway Weekly Brief newsletter
Bible Gateway Weekly Brief
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Support Bible Gateway—Browse the Bible Gateway Store
BibleGatewayStore.com

Biblical Preaching Expert Haddon Robinson Dies at 86
Bible Gateway Blog
See books by Haddon Robinson in the Bible Gateway Store

65% of Christians Face Doubt; 29% Stopped Reading the Bible When Doubting
Barna Group
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, If In Doubt: An Interview with Rhys Stenner
Read other articles about doubt on the Bible Gateway Blog

Knoxville Police Department Bible Verse Plaque to be Taken Down After Legal Threat
Knoxville News Sentinel
Knoxville News Sentinel: Photo: Bible Verse Plaque Removed from KPD Wall
Read Romans 8:31 on Bible Gateway

Experts Hunt for Biblical Tabernacle that Housed the Ark of the Covenant
FOX News
Read about the tabernacle in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
Read about Shiloh in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
See the Biblical Archaeology section in the Bible Gateway Store

Ancient Egyptian Records Indicate Philistines Weren’t Aegean Pirates After All
Haaretz
Read about the Philistines in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway

Research: Shroud of Turin ‘Stained With Blood From Torture Victim’
The Independent
See books about the Shroud of Turin in the Bible Gateway Store

Texas Baptists Host Historic Presentation of Uzbek Bible
Baptist General Convention of Texas

Central Australia’s Arrernte People Can Now Read the Bible in Their Own Language
The Catholic Leader

Biblical Zoo’s Aquarium Raises Habitat Preservation Awareness
CBN News

See other Bible News Roundup weekly posts

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The NIV Kids’ Visual Study Bible: An Interview with Sara Bierling

Sara BierlingThe NIV Kids’ Visual Study Bible (Zonderkidz, 2017), for ages 8–12, brings the Bible to life in four-color illustrated splendor. This study Bible includes a spectacular full-color interior featuring over 700 illustrations, photos, infographics, and maps on every page that visually represent key Bible information. Each page also features important facts located near the relevant verse. Intriguing facts; colorful, engaging maps; photographs; and illustrations make this a Bible they’ll want to explore.

Bible Gateway interviewed Sara Bierling, general editor of the NIV Kids’ Visual Study Bible (@Zonderkidz).

Buy your copy of NIV Kids' Visual Study Bible in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day            Buy your copy of NIV Kids' Visual Study Bible Imitation Leather, Bronze in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day            Buy your copy of NIV Kids' Visual Study Bible Imitation Leather, Teal in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

What makes this kids’ Bible different from other Bibles?

Sara Bierling: This Bible has more visuals than any other full-text Bible that our company has ever published. It combines photographs, four-color illustrations, maps, and infographics (text presented in a visually appealing, graphic way) to illuminate the Bible text.

Buy your copy of NIV Kids' Visual Study Bible in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

Why is it titled the Kids’ Visual Study Bible?

Sara Bierling: We wanted to create a study Bible that appealed to visual learners. So, while there are written notes, we also wanted to provide content that visually stood out on the page and made learning about the Bible seem inviting and easy.

Buy your copy of NIV Kids' Visual Study Bible in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

What will the notes teach children?

Sara Bierling: The notes in this study Bible are general, but they cover important theological take-aways as well as historical details that will help children understand the world of the Bible. The infographics allow children to quickly see the most important takeaways from individual books of the Bible, to understand family relationships, and to make conclusions about the importance and impact of certain Bible stories.

Buy your copy of NIV Kids' Visual Study Bible in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

Why should parents buy this Bible?

Sara Bierling: This Bible will be great for children who are reluctant readers or are struggling to find motivation to pick up their Bible. It will also be interesting for children interested in the historicity of the Bible.

Buy your copy of NIV Kids' Visual Study Bible in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

How are biblical passages of violence and mature content handled in this study Bible for kids?

Sara Bierling: We don’t shy away from discussing violence in the Bible. However, we try not to dwell on it or give graphic details. As far as any sexual content, we always strive to speak about it in non-specific terms with language that isn’t too explicit, so that parents can choose what to explain to their children and what to table until they are mature enough. That said, we don’t censor the text of the NIV translation, so some guidance from parents may be necessary as children read the Bible.

Buy your copy of NIV Kids' Visual Study Bible in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

How should this study Bible best be used to get the most out of it?

Sara Bierling: This Bible doesn’t need to be read chronologically, so I would suggest children can use it as an every-day Bible, with the notes and visuals enhancing the Bible text they are already reading. They might choose to flip through the Bible to look at the images and therefore delve into a portion of scripture they hadn’t yet discovered. There is also a handy topical index for both the infographics and the maps that children may find useful if they are studying a specific theme of the Bible.


Bio: Sara Bierling is an Acquisitions Editor working primarily on Bibles for all ages as well as YA titles for Zondervan Teen and Blink YA. Prior to working for Zonderkidz, Sara was an editor in the Zondervan Bibles department, a freelance editor and writer, and an editor for School Specialty Publishing (formerly McGraw-Hill Children’s Publishing), where she developed elementary grades educational products. She holds a BA in English and Writing from Hope College.

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“I Had to Be the Voice for Those Who Could No Longer Speak for Themselves”

Dr. Bennet OmaluBy Dr. Bennet Omalu

Early in the fifth century, an ascetic monk from the east felt compelled to travel to Rome, a city he had never visited before. He arrived to find huge crowds all moving in one direction. Since he did not know why the Spirit had led him to the city, he decided to follow the crowd. He quickly became caught up in the festive mood that permeated the crowds. His sense of expectation rose as the push of the crowds led him to the coliseum, where he sat down with the rest of the people and waited to see what might happen next. He did not have to wait long. Two gladiators came out into the arena and began fighting with swords and shields. Telemachus had never seen such a sight. Horrified by the sight, he stood on his seat and shouted, “In the name of Christ, stop!” No one paid any attention to him. The rest of the crowd cheered at the top of their lungs as the two gladiators began to draw blood from each other.

As the crowd cheered, Telemachus ran down from his seat and jumped into the arena. He went straight to the two gladiators, shouting, “In the name of Christ, stop!” The fighting men ignored him until he put himself between them. When the crowd saw him interfering with their entertainment, they began to boo and shout for him to get out of the way and let the show continue. Telemachus would not budge. “In the name of Christ, stop!” he shouted again. The crowd went from annoyed to enraged. A gladiator pushed Telemachus to the ground. As he lay in the dirt, the angry mob surged toward him. One man threw a stone at him, striking him in the chest. Another stone came flying in—and then another and another.

He shielded himself with his arms, but the flurry of stones was too strong. Telemachus tried to get up from the ground but was knocked back down as a rock struck him in the head. A stream of blood spurted out. The blood only seemed to stir up the anger of the mob even more. “In the name of Christ, stop!” he said one last time. The stones continued to rain down, even after the small monk stopped moving. When it was clear he was dead, the anger of the crowd turned to revulsion over what they had done. Those who had cheered for blood felt very different when it covered their own hands. Saint Telemachus could not stop the gladiator combat show in the Roman Coliseum that day, but his death ultimately moved Emperor Honorius to ban the fights forever.

I did not set out to be a modern-day Telemachus when I started writing my first Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) paper. I had not taken up the cause of telling the world, or at least America, the inherent dangers of football. At the time, the paper was nothing more than the final step to fulfill the promise I had made to the late Pittsburgh Steeler Mike Webster, not a crusade.

As I wrote in the last chapter, the hardest part of writing the paper was getting started. Until I came up with a name, words refused to come. Once I settled on CTE, the words seemed to fly out. I completed the first draft of the paper in a little over a month. While I made multiple revisions based on editorial input from my coauthors and the editors at the journal that published it, the bulk of the paper is the same as that original draft. I truly believe my writing was guided by God Himself. Right around the time the movie Concussion was released, I went back and reread the CTE paper for the first time since its publication. To be honest, I nearly fell over when I read it. This came out of me? I thought in amazement. This paper is too good to have been written by me! I was floored by its audacious scientific originality, creativity, and innovation.

The Bennet Omalu of today could not write such a beautiful piece. At that time, I was still filled with youthful idealism and hope. When I wrote that paper, I believed it would truly make a difference, that it would spark a genuine dialogue within the football community that would result in a game that protects its players. I boldly spoke my mind and made the type of strong assertions Dr. Wecht had taught me to make whenever I spoke as an expert in a court case. My boldness was based on truth. I had no reason to be anything but forthright. I did not take a side in the paper. Truth does not have a side. Truth is truth. It is up to us to conform to truth; truth does not conform to us.

The paper focused on one case—that of Mike Webster. Many more former football players probably suffer from CTE. However, because there had not yet been a concerted effort to look for the presence of CTE in the brains of former football players, we have no way to know how widespread this disease might be. I assumed many of those connected with football would be anxious to know more, since I also assumed they surely had the players’ best interests at heart. Yes, I was young and very naive.

After completing the first draft, I set the paper aside for a short time and then went back and made revisions. I sent copies to Drs. DeKosky and Hamilton, along with Dr. Wecht. I also sent a copy to Ryan Minster and Ilyas Kamboh, both of whom were in the Department of Human Genetics at the University of Pittsburgh. These men were my coauthors on the paper. Each of them suggested changes. Some I accepted, while some I did not. I sent the final draft back to them all. We went back and forth until we had a manuscript we were all proud of.

Now the question was where to submit the finished paper for publication. I believed there was only one logical choice: Neurosurgery, the same publication in which the NFL concussion committee presented its research. The journal’s editor at the time, Michael Apuzzo, was a professor of neurosurgery at the University of Southern California. Under his direction, the journal had added a sports section that featured articles on sports and the brain. Since Neurosurgery had already published NFL papers focusing on football and concussions, it seemed the logical place to submit my paper.

From what I observed in the review process, I believe my paper went through many reviewers—possibly up to eighteen—not two or three. Why so many? I do not know. All of them sent comments to me. While many were positive and asked legitimate scientific questions that I needed to clarify, others had a decidedly negative tone. Many of them did not want to see my paper published, but the reasons they gave were not scientifically valid. Some of the negative comments questioned my credentials. They insinuated that I was a no-name and a quack. Who is Omalu? they essentially asked, and why should we take seriously the research conducted by nothing more than a government employee doing autopsies in Pittsburgh?

The attitude expressed by these reviewers speaks to one of the fallacies of accepted scientific research. Today, the scientific community yields to established, experienced professors in university settings to guide research, review research papers, and determine whose research is funded. The result is a complete lack of innovative approaches to old problems. Instead, we are stuck with conformational intelligence, where the same approach is used over and over.

The seemingly endless process of back-and-forth with the many reviewers left me very frustrated. I suspected that none to several of those reviewing my paper were trauma neuropathologists. Many of their comments made it clear they may not have been adequately educated on the pathology of neurotrauma. The process of answering their questions and objections took three to four times the amount of time it took to write the paper itself. My responses were more than five times the length of the paper. Yet no matter how much I wrote, more questions came.

My patience began to wear thin. Gradually, without my knowing it, a simmering anger arose within me. I could not believe this was happening in America. In all fairness, some of the reviewers were good to me and commended me for my work. A minority remained vehement that the paper should never be published and that Omalu should not be trusted because his assertions are dangerous.

However, to the credit of Dr. Apuzzo, Neurosurgery ultimately decided to publish my paper. They included some of the comments from reviewers, but most of those included were positive. One in particular stood out. Dr. Donald Marion, a neurosurgeon from Boston, gave some very constructive comments. Given what happened next, he was an angel from God to me, encouraging me when I could have easily drowned in a sea of doubt.

Finally, I received a copy of the volume 57, number 1, July 2005, issue of Neurosurgery. I opened to page 128 and just stared at the article. I did not reread it. I had read it enough times during the editorial process. Instead my thoughts turned to Mike Webster and his family. You’ve been vindicated, Mike, I thought. After reading this, people will know you did not want the life into which you descended. Football did that to you. I hope this gives you rest.

And then I closed the journal and set it on a shelf. I never could have imagined that this was going to be deemed one of the most influential case reports in sports medicine. When I closed the cover of Neurosurgery, I did not imagine that paper would come to define so much of my life and my life’s work. In my mind, it was very much like the other papers I wrote both before and after Mike. I had discovered something in the brain of Mike Webster and now I had reported it. That afternoon I went back to work and completed another autopsy then filed my reports on it, just as I did every day. The Mike Webster paper was just another day at the office, not a life-defining moment.

Then the NFL stepped in.

One morning several weeks after the publication of “Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy in a National Football League Player,” my phone rang. Dr. Wecht’s secretary was on the phone. She only called when there was a problem or when Dr. Wecht needed me. As expected, she said, “Cyril needs to reach you. May he call you at this number?” she asked.

“Of course,” I said.

A few minutes later, the phone rang again. “Bennet,” Dr. Wecht said in an anxious tone of voice. He was usually very loquacious, but not this morning. “I just got off the phone with an editor from Neurosurgery.”

“Is everything alright?” I asked.

“No. The NFL sent them a letter demanding that your paper be retracted. They want you to say you made the whole thing up.”

I sat there stunned for a moment. “What did the editor say to them?” I asked.

“Dr. Apuzzo has set up a review committee to address their concerns and determine if it should be retracted.”

I wondered if this had been the original plan all along—if they had only agreed to publish my paper to embarrass me. Now it made sense. By holding me up to professional ridicule, they would send a message to other doctors across the world that you don’t mess with the National Football League. If my paper was retracted and all my science debunked, then my career was as good as done. No one would ever touch me or the question of CTE ever again. Panic started to set in—panic and anger. But then I remembered the words of Saint Paul:

We know that all things work for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose… If God is for us, who can be against us?… What will separate us from the love of Christ? Will anguish, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or the sword?… No, in all these things we conquer overwhelmingly through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor present things, nor future things, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. — Romans 8:28,31,35,37-9 (NIV)

Once I calmed down, I realized I had the least to lose from this battle. My coauthors were far more established than me. I was only three months out of my training as a neuropathologist when I conducted the Mike Webster autopsy. I was a neophyte. But Drs. Wecht, DeKosky, Hamilton, and Kamboh had their names and reputations on the line. I wondered if they regretted becoming associated with this no-name Nigerian doctor.

“So what should we do, Cyril?” I asked.

Dr. Wecht laughed. “Don’t worry about these idiots,” he said. He actually used a much more colorful term, which is Dr. Wecht for you. “Don’t let them intimidate you or silence you. Dr. Marion is going to call you later. Listen to him, and do whatever he asks you to do.”

“I will,” I said. I hung up the phone and whispered to myself, What have I done? Tears rolled down my face. I knew I had done nothing wrong against anyone. Everything I had done that led up to this moment, from ordering the fixing of Mike Webster’s brain to the extensive study of the slides of his brain to all of my research into brain disease and ultimately in publishing this paper—all of it was driven by my desire to have justice for Mike and restore his humanity. And now I was under attack. My career and the careers of those who had stood with me were all at stake. I knew what I had to do. I had to stand firm on the truth. Truth will not be moved or intimidated by those who seek to silence it.

I had never set out to become a modern-day Telemachus. My goal was never to be the voice of an outsider who points out what no one else was able to see because their eyes were clouded by conformational intelligence. If the NFL had simply ignored my first paper, I may never have become the one running out into the football arena and crying out, “In the name of Christ, stop!” But once they demanded a retraction, that was exactly who I became. I had no choice. I had to be the voice for those who could no longer speak for themselves.

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Truth Doesn't Have a SideAdapted from Truth Doesn’t Have a Side by Dr. Bennet Omalu. Click here to learn more about this title.

Truth Doesn’t Have a Side follows the journey of neuropathologist Dr. Bennet Omalu, who uncovered the truth about brain damage in American football players, and his battle against those who would silence him. Read this incredible story that is changing the course of high-impact sports and could change the course of sports culture forever.

One day in 2002 the fifty-year old body of former Pittsburgh Steeler and hall of famer Mike Webster was laid on a cold table in front of pathologist Dr. Bennet Omalu. Webster’s body looked to Omalu like the body of a much older man, and the circumstances of his behavior prior to his death were clouded in mystery. But when Omalu cut into Webster’s brain, it appeared to be normal. Something didn’t add up.

It was at this moment, Omalu studying slides of Webster’s brain tissue under a microscope, that the world of contact sports would never be the same: the discovery of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy. CTE can result in an array of devastating consequences including deterioration in attention, memory loss, social instability, depression, and even suicide. And Omalu’s discovery of CTE in the brain of an American football player has become the catalyst of a blazing controversy across all contact sports.

At the center of that controversy stands the unlikely Dr. Bennet Omalu, a Nigerian-born American citizen, a mild-mannered, gentle man of faith. It is fascinating that it would take someone on the outside of American culture to make this amazing discovery, and refuse to let it be kept hidden. Dr. Omalu began his life in strife, growing up in war-torn Nigeria. But his medical studies in forensic pathology proved to be a lifeline. It fed his natural curiosity and awakened within a deeper desire to always search for the truth. Who would have thought that such an unexpected character would play such a role in bringing to life this world-changing data?

In Truth Doesn’t Have a Side, discover the truth about CTE: Its causes and symptoms, how we might keep our children safe and guide professional athletes when CTE sets in. The problem of CTE is coming to light with each new story about an athlete’s concussion problem, and we are likely facing dramatic changes to professional sports. You’ll be inspired by Dr. Bennet Omalu a man driven by his love and concern for the welfare of all people, and his professional vow to speak the truth.

Dr. Bennet Omalu is the Nigerian-American neuropathologist who discovered and named chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in American football players, other athletes, and military veterans. He is the chief medical examiner of San Joaquin County, California, and a clinical professor at the University of California, Davis. The Hollywood film Concussion, staring Will Smith, highlights his amazing story. Dr. Omalu’s new book Truth Doesn’t Have a Side provides intimate details of his life and the battle that followed his discovery of CTE. Bennet and his wife have two children and reside in Sacramento, California.

40 Days Through the Prayers of Jesus: An Interview with Tim Cameron

Tim CameronWhy did Jesus spend time praying? What are the lessons that Jesus’ prayer life teaches us? How should we pray in order to know God intimately?

Bible Gateway interviewed Tim Cameron (@timcameron8245) about his book, 40 Days Through the Prayers of Jesus: A Journey to Pray More Like Christ (Charisma House, 2017).

What’s the purpose of prayer?

Tim Cameron: I believe prayer has two great purposes. The first purpose is to change us. Prayer changes your outlook on life. It changes your desires, your loves, your compulsions, and your addictions. It changes you internally and externally (Hebrews 7:25). Through prayer we can come to God daily, and we can engage our God intimately. The closer we come to God, the more God reveals to us our need to change, and the more we’re changed by simply beholding him.

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Prayer changes us so that we change things. And that’s the second purpose of prayer: to empower us to change things. It’s the very nature of prayer to deposit in us the desire to intercede for others, whether it’s praying for someone’s salvation or their needs. Every Christian is called to this wonderful ministry: the work of reconciliation—that by our words and deeds we might bring others into harmony with Christ (2 Corinthians 5:18).

Why and how do we think wrongly about prayer?

Tim Cameron: We think wrongly about prayer for a lot of reasons. Prayer is simply not a part of our natural life. “The person without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God but considers them foolishness, and cannot understand them because they are discerned only through the Spirit” (2 Corinthians 4:18, NIV).

We think prayer is a way to get things. We come to the Lord with our lists, our needs, and our wants, and of course there are the catastrophic events that cast us upon him. Don’t get me wrong; I bring my lists to God daily. But few people I know come before the Lord every day, throughout the day, petitioning him to hear requests that will build his kingdom. It seems so few Christians experience the real purpose of prayer: first, intimacy with Christ, and then the power to call down the blessings of the kingdom of God into the lives of people.

Why have you formatted this book to be read in 40 days?

Tim Cameron: The number 40 is significant in the Scriptures, particularly with the life of Jesus. The number 40 is associated with new beginnings, testing, and victory in battles you would usually lose.

It rained 40 days and 40 nights during the Flood, and Noah and his family remained in the ark another 40 days while the water receded. When they were finally able to leave the ark, the world was different—new—and they were on the precipice of a new beginning.

The giant Goliath taunted the army of Israel for 40 days, morning and evening. After his legendary defeat of Goliath, David was no longer viewed as merely a shepherd; he had become a mighty warrior and man of valor, and he eventually became king of Israel.

More importantly Jesus fasted for 40 days (Luke 4:2) following the first time he prayed in public at his baptism. While lifting his hands and blessing the disciples, he ascended to heaven 40 days after his resurrection (Luke 24:50; Acts 1:3). Forty days in the prayers of Jesus can change your life.

How did Jesus view prayer?

Tim Cameron: Jesus was completely a man, but he was also completely God. As a man he had the same needs that we have: he needed divine support, strength, and blessing. The mystery here is that there was no more contradiction in his praying than there was in his drinking or eating. Both are consistent with who he was while here on this earth.

Jesus was divine, yet he was tempted just like us. He was perfect, yet he was a man. He needed to pray all night on occasions. His humanity compelled him to pray. He sought the Father’s wisdom, setting a profound example for us.

What did Jesus pray for? How did he view prayer? I believe he prayed for the Father’s will to be done in his life. I believe he viewed prayer as an absolute necessity for his life. Jesus gained such a place of intimacy with the Father through prayer that he discerned the very words the Father would have him speak and the acts the Father would have him do.

What do you mean when you say “begin all things in prayer”?

Tim Cameron: It didn’t matter if the issue at hand was profound or an everyday incident—Jesus began all things with prayer. Before setting out to preach and cast out demons throughout Galilee, he rose a great while before sunrise to pray (Mark 1:35-39). When they rolled the stone away from Lazarus’s tomb, Jesus prayed for all to hear before raising him from the dead (John 11:40-44). And as he sat at a table for dinner with two disciples on the road to Emmaus, he simply prayed (Luke 24:30-31).

Beginning all things in prayer is a foundational discipline of the Christian life. The times of praying in stillness and solitude are when God reaches into our minds, emotions, and wills; the deepest places of our souls. In the quietness of prayer we free ourselves from the constant distractions of the world and the nagging whispers of our past, dysfunctions, and sins. Beginning all things in prayer during the day and having close and continual fellowship in prayer with God will leave its mark on us.

How can that be accomplished, practically speaking?

Tim Cameron: As we discover and experience the secret place of prayer, we’ll be changed. We’ll experience the fullness of the Holy Spirit in our lives. The Holy Spirit will guide, strengthen, and correct us. He’ll intercede for us to gain a spirit of prayer in our lives. All things are possible with God (Matthew 19:26).

What’s “the secret place” of prayer?

Tim Cameron: Where do you pray? Is where you pray really that important? Evidently it is; Jesus specifically mentioned where we should and shouldn’t pray.

Where not to pray: in a location chosen so others can see you. “When you pray, you shall not be like the hypocrites. For they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners that they may be seen by men. Truly I say to you, they have their reward” (Matthew 6:5).

Where to pray: in private in your room. “But you, when you pray, enter your closet, and when you have shut your door, pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you openly” (v. 6).

There’s a great secret to prayer: pray in secret. Prayer is meant for the Father; we don’t pray to be heard by men. This is the secret place of prayer.

What does it mean to “be still”?

Tim Cameron: It means to turn off the technology and smartphone—get away from the clamor of the world—and still yourself before the Lord. Finding stillness may be one of the greatest challenges in our relationship with Christ and our prayer lives. There are two great hindrances we face every day in our search for stillness: our busy lifestyles and the constant noise of our culture. From the incessant barrage of information to the insidious advertising, our toxic culture leaves us no rest. Are you busy? Where are you on the Facebook Addiction Scale? Enough said.

As simple as it may seem, we find stillness by making a choice; deciding to sit down away from all the demands of our life and technology. God bestowed on us free will; it’s not an illusion. We’re not victims of our culture. We have control over the way we respond to everything that comes our way. It’s in stillness that we come to know our God, “Be still and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth” (Ps. 46:10).

Unpack how the Lord’s Prayer of Matthew 6:9-13 teaches how to pray.

Tim Cameron: I love the simplicity of this prayer Christ gave to the disciples. It begins and ends with worship to our God. Sandwiched between worship, Christ instructs us to pray that His kingdom come and His will be done. This is His purpose.

Then He instructs us to pray for provision, pardon, and protection. These three things sound so simple, but they reach so deeply into our lives. Can we be satisfied with our provision for today and not compare ourselves to others? Can we really forgive others? What about that person who gossiped about you? And He ends with a great crescendo; through prayer we can be saved from temptation and delivered from evil. Wow, we need to pray this prayer!

What is a favorite Bible passage of yours and why?

Tim Cameron: Isaiah 50:4, “The Lord God has given me the tongue of the learned, that I may know how to sustain him who is weary with a word; He awakens me morning by morning; He awakens my ear to listen as the learned.” I love this verse. It is one of the many “snapshots” of Jesus we find in Isaiah. The verse speaks at so many levels to our hope in the Lord, His plans for us, and how those purposes are accomplished.

Our God does for us the things we cannot do. He wraps us in garments of salvation and righteousness (Is. 61:10). God’s plan for us is to boldly deliver the good news to those who do not know this great salvation through Jesus. It is sobering and enthralling at the same time to speak a “word” from God’s heart to a person.

It is the greatest delight of my soul to meet the Lord each morning in the secret place and learn from Him. This is where He awakens my spirit to drink deeply of the Spirit. This is where He teaches me walk after the Spirit.

What are your thoughts about Bible Gateway and the Bible Gateway App?

Tim Cameron: What a marvelous resource. Honestly, I never thought I would make the transition from my two-and-a-half-inch thick Bible to a smartphone Bible app. However, when the pastor says turn to…I pull out my phone and open the Bible Gateway App. I’m an inveterate user. I love the voice function for road trips.


Bio: Tim Cameron is a passionate follower of Jesus. He’s a graduate of Oral Roberts University (ORU), where he earned a bachelor’s degree in education and was a Division 1 basketball player. After Cameron earned a master’s degree in teaching arts from the University of Tulsa, he served ORU as a director of admissions and financial aid. He later worked as a senior high principal in public schools, then became headmaster at Metro Christian Academy, one of the largest private schools in Oklahoma. Today he gives himself to the Word and intercession. A speaker and the author of The Forty-Day Word Fast: A Spiritual Journey to Eliminate Toxic Words From Your Life, he serves in prayer ministry and as an elder at Believers Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

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Updated: Chart of Israel’s and Judah’s Kings and Prophets

Blogger Grid member Craig T. Owens (@craigtowens) created the helpful chart below delineating the Old Testament prophets and kings of Israel and Judah and has now updated it:

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Click the image to enlarge this chart of the prophets and kings of Israel and Judah

Craig says:

One challenging point in history is the divided kingdoms of Israel (the 10 northern tribes) and Judah (the 2 southern tribes). What makes it challenging when reading straight through the Bible [in chronological order] is that the history is covered in 1 and 2 Kings and then again in 1 and 2 Chronicles. In the midst of these kingdoms, several prophets are sent by God. Some of these prophets only have their words recorded in Kings or Chronicles, while others have their words recorded elsewhere in the Bible (usually the book name is the prophet’s name).

In trying to keep all of these people and messages clear in my mind, I have put together a list of all the kings and prophets during the period of the divided kingdom (roughly 931-586 BC).

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Bible News Roundup – Week of July 16, 2017

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Mom Gives Bible to Daughter’s Killer in Court
WVTM-13

Jimmy Carter Signed Bible Gifted to Huntsville Habitat for Humanity Families
MuskokaRegion.com

Sioux County Joins Iowa Bible Reading Marathon
N’West Iowa REVIEW
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Scripture Says Reading the Bible in Public is Important

Instructions for Reading Aloud in the Gutenberg Bible
Harry Ransom Center

Biblica Completes Accessible Edition of New Testament
Mission Network News

American Bible Society Announces Launch of Faith & Liberty Discovery Center
Global Philadelphia Association
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, History of the American Bible Society: An Interview with John Fea

Bibles for 98% of the World is in Sight
Eternity
Read the Bible on Bible Gateway

Interview With Mike Perreau, Director General of United Bible Societies
Sight Magazine
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Bible Translation Organizations

With Bibles and Shovels, a Search for the Biblical Tabernacle Gathers Pace at Shiloh
The Times of Israel
Read Exodus 25 on Bible Gateway
Read about the tabernacle in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
Read about Shiloh in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
See the Biblical Archaeology section in the Bible Gateway Store

Biblical Account of Gezer’s Destruction Gains Ground with Torched Skeleton Finds
The Times of Israel
Read the article about Gezer in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
Read 1 Kings 9:15-17 on Bible Gateway

How the World Reads the Bible
La Croix International

Nigerian Sign Language Gains Scripture
Mission Network News

A Bible in Cree Syllabics Among Historical Treasures at First Nations University
CBC News

Berlin Exhibition Guide on Bible Translations Also Focuses on Armenia
ArmenPress

The Rise of the Nons: Protestants Keep Ditching Denominations
CT

9 Out of 10 Ordinary British Christians Feel Marginalized
Premier

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