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Feasting on the Scriptures, Episode 3: Reading the Bible with Jesus at the Center

The Bible is a collection of many different ancient texts, representing many different literary genres and historical contexts. Is it possible to recognize and follow a single concept through such a long and diverse text? What does it mean when we say that Jesus is at the “center” of the Bible—and how do we go about recognizing the presence of Jesus as we read?

Those are the big questions addressed in the third episode of “Feasting on the Scriptures,” our ongoing Facebook Live discussion series with the Institute for Bible Reading. You can watch episode 3, “Reading the Bible with Jesus at the Center,” on our Facebook page, or right here:

You don’t need to have watched episodes 1 and 2 to appreciate episode 3, but if you missed them, you can watch them here:

Follow our Facebook page so you’ll be alerted when we broadcast the next episode later this week!

The 40 Days Between Jesus’ Resurrection and Ascension: An Interview with D. Michael MacKinnon

D. Michael MacKinnonA 79-year-old frail man tells a story to his granddaughter that he’s kept a secret for decades due to his fear. At the age of nine, he was an orphan living on the street in Jerusalem. He had an encounter with a bloody and beaten man who was forced to drag a heavy timber cross for his own crucifixion. Little did he know at the time he was witnessing first-hand the last 40 days Jesus walked the earth.

Bible Gateway interviewed D. Michael MacKinnon about his book, The Forty Days: A Vision of Christ’s Lost Weeks (Post Hill Press—Simon & Schuster, 2017).

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

Explain how your childhood forged the impetus for this novel.

D. Michael MacKinnon: Unfortunately, as a child, I grew up in abject poverty and was often homeless. By the time I was 17 years of age, we had been evicted from 34 homes. Most of those homes having no heat or electricity.

When I was five years of age, I got a little plastic nativity scene. I was drawn to it like nothing before. The little baby Jesus in that plastic nativity scene became my best friend in life and I talked to him every day. At five years of age, we were being evicted out of our home and they found me hiding in a closet clutching my baby Jesus nativity scene.

Often, when we were evicted, we were taken in by my grandparents. It was at their home as a young child that I discovered my grandmother’s Bible. As soon as I did, I began to read it to learn more about baby Jesus and more about Christianity.

When did you finally write the novel and under what circumstances?

D. Michael MacKinnon: Over the last decade or more, once or twice a year for just a second or two at a time, I’d have a flash out of nowhere in my mind saying: “The Forty Days. There is a powerful story there. Tell it.”

Not really knowing what to make of it, I just ignored them and went on with my life. About five years ago, my wife walked into my home office and saw a yellow-sticky up on the wall above my desk with just the words THE FORTY DAYS written on it.

She asked me what it was and what it meant.

I turned to her and answered: “I don’t really know.”

Then, just over a year ago, while sitting in my home office working on another project, the entire book flooded into my head in a few minutes. I then sat at my desk for the next ten hours or so and wrote the book exactly as it came into my head that day.

Over the next few months, I met with a number of ministers and each told me it was my obligation to tell the backstory of how this book came to me.

What is the setting of the story?

D. Michael MacKinnon: The setting takes place 70 years after the resurrection of Jesus. In a poor, one-room home built from stone, mud, and straw home just outside of Jerusalem, a frail old man tells his granddaughter and her doubting husband of a miraculous secret he kept to himself for decades out of fear. He tells them that as an orphaned nine-year-old street urchin, he had an amazing interaction with a “bloody and beaten man” being forced to drag a heavy timber cross for his own crucifixion. The old man then finally reveals what he witnessed during the 40 days after the resurrection.

Describe the grandfather, the book’s main character.

D. Michael MacKinnon: The grandfather is now 79 years of age and feels his time is near. His life was one of great loss and great tragedy, but because of that divine interaction 70 years before, his faith and belief in Jesus Christ increases with each passing day. His granddaughter is the light of his mortal life and he feels now is the time to tell her and her shepherd husband of his first person encounter with Jesus and his teachings.

The grandfather describes how, as a boy, he encountered the wounded Jesus on his way to being crucified and then his witnessing of Jesus’ death. What do you want your readers to experience in these scenes?

D. Michael MacKinnon: They know—but all of us need to be reminded from time to time—that Jesus loves us all and died for us all. As spelled out in the Bible: “For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by His life” (Romans 5:10).

I want them to know that this was the ultimate sacrifice and we must honor him with our faith and our deeds every day of our mortal lives.

Explain how you’ve written the book to be an account through the eyes of a child of the events of Jesus’ life after his resurrection.

D. Michael MacKinnon: When the whole book flew into my head that day, the experiences of the little boy were the most overwhelming. I believed—and believe—that the little boy was really there. That he was real. That he witnessed the miracles of Jesus and was meant to tell his story. I truly do believe this was a vision, as personally, I know of no other explanation. As one minister told me: “Because of your horrible childhood, it is entirely possible that you were but a conduit to tell this beautiful and faith-filled story.”

Why was the grandfather afraid to tell his story for so many years and why did that fear end?

D. Michael MacKinnon: As the Bible teaches us: “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23).

The grandfather was an imperfect man. He had seen men before him who spoke of Jesus punished, beaten, and even put to death. He feared to speak the truth but when he did, he also came to realize, it was all part of his greater plan.

What portions of the Bible did you rely on in writing the book?

D. Michael MacKinnon: There were many powerful verses from Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John which spoke directly to the crucifixion and the resurrection. All should be reread during this Easter season.

What do you want your readers to understand when they’ve finished reading The Forty Days, especially as we’re approaching Good Friday and Easter?

D. Michael MacKinnon: That in these uncertain and even dangerous times, faith is more important than ever. That it’s critically important that we share the divine teachings of Jesus with as many people as possible. I truly believe that’s why this little book came to me in the way it did. To shine a light on the 40d he walked the earth after his resurrection as witnessed through the joyful eyes of a little boy who was so deeply touched by his glory and love.

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

D. Michael MacKinnon: Biblegateway.com is an invaluable resource for those looking to explore the Christian Bible. It should be visited regularly by those hoping to better understand the Bible, the Christian faith, and the teachings of Jesus Christ.

Is there anything else you’d like to say?

D. Michael MacKinnon: Former US senator and former head of the Red Cross Elizabeth Dole told me she read the book in one sitting and that it was “one of the most powerful and inspirational books [she] had ever read.” She told me every Christian minister and clergy member should read the book and spread the word. She believes it’s a book that should be shared by all Christians because of Christ’s messages inside. She also felt it was very important for readers to know that I did not take a dime for the book and that, for me, the only thing you do with a book like this is to help a charity in his name.


Bio: D. Michael MacKinnon is a former White House and Pentagon official. While at the White House he had the high honor to write for two Presidents. Additionally, he’s written for every major paper in the nation as well as appearing on all of the major television and cable networks as a political commentator. Often homeless as a child, at five years of age a little plastic replica of the baby Jesus touched him and changed his life forever.

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Bible News Roundup – Week of April 9, 2017

Read this week’s Bible Gateway Weekly Brief newsletter
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Support Bible Gateway—Browse the Bible Gateway Store
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Kentucky Puts Focus on Bible with New Laws, Executive Action
Kentucky Today

‘Bible Answer Man’ Hank Hanegraaff Converts to Orthodox Christianity
CT

Holy Week Text Messages to Tell Story of Easter in New Bible Society Australia Campaign
Sight Magazine
Australia Bible Society: Easter Holy Text
Read Bible Gateway Blog post, Holy Week and Easter: The People, Places, and Events
Read Bible Gateway Blog post, Bible Gateway “Holy Week” Infographic

Hong Kong Easter Exhibit Highlights the Truth of the Bible
CBN News
Read Chinese Bibles on Bible Gateway

Christians Remain World’s Largest Religious Group; But They’re Dying Out in Europe
FactTank

BBC Survey: Resurrection Did Not Happen, Say Quarter of Self-Identified Christians
BBC News

How Single Women Became an Unstoppable Force in Bible Translation
CT
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Bible Translation Organizations

Diocese of Hamilton, Ontario Seeking Handler for $200K Bible
CBC News
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, The Saint John’s Bible: A Work of Art

In Shrewsbury, New Jersey, a 300-Year-Old Bible Known for a Typo
Asbury Park Press

How One Wrong Letter Made This Bible Worth £6,000
Nottingham Post

Ancient Texts from Bible Go On Display in Dublin’s Chester Beatty Library
Belfast Telegraph
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, A Collection of Bible Museums & Exhibits

Kluge Center to Host Panel & Workshop On Scripture & Religious Belief in American History, May 4 & 5
Library of Congress

Children Enjoy Creating Bible Stories Exhibition in Barrow, UK
North-West Evening Mail

Antioch-Lithonia Missionary Baptist Church, Georgia Sends Hundreds of Bibles to Underdeveloped Countries
On Common Ground News

Study: Worldwide Downward Trend in Restrictions on Religion Reversed
RNS

See other Bible News Roundup weekly posts

Video: Reading the Bible as One Story

The second episode of our “Feasting on the Scriptures” live discussion series is complete! It focuses on the topic of reading the Bible as one coherent story. You can watch it on Facebook, or right here:

If you missed episode 1, click here to watch it. It’s not necessary to watch the first episode to appreciate the second.

We’ll be back next week, Monday, April 10 at 11 am EDT for episode 3 of this ongoing discussion with the Institute for Bible Reading! To make sure you’re notified when the next episode, “Reading the Bible with Jesus at the Center,” goes live, follow Bible Gateway on Facebook!

Tune in Tomorrow for Episode 2 of “Feasting on the Scriptures”

Did you catch our live discussion last week on the topic of “Feasting on the Scriptures”? If you missed it, you can watch it here—and then make plans to tune in tomorrow (April 6) at 11am EDT for the second episode!

In the “Feasting on the Scriptures” live discussion series, we’re exploring what it means to read the Bible—why it’s challenging, why it’s rewarding, and how we can go read it wisely and well. In tomorrow’s episode, we’ll talk about reading the Bible as one story. Is it possible to read such a diverse book as the Bible as a single, coherent story? How does doing so affect our understanding of God’s story? These are the questions we’ll be discussing with our co-hosts from the Institute for Bible Reading.

So mark your calendar and join us on April 6 at 11am EDT to watch the discussion! We’ll broadcast the discussion live on our Facebook page, and will make it available for viewing after the fact for anyone who misses it. In the meantime, you can get caught up on the discussion so far by watching last week’s episode. See you tomorrow for the discussion!

One Way to Explore the Rich Nuances of the Bible

Dr. Stanley N. GundryThis guest Bible Gateway Blog post is a personal reflection on the NIV Faithlife Study Bible (Zondervan, 2017) (@NIVBible) by Dr. Stanley N. Gundry, senior vice president and publisher, Zondervan Academic, and editor-in-chief, Zondervan.


[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, NIV Faithlife Study Bible Encourages Readers to Stay Curious about God’s Word]

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Be True to the Word

My father was a pastor who had strong convictions about Bible doctrine and how the Bible should be interpreted—I say “strong” convictions, but perhaps I should say “dogmatic.” As I grew into adulthood, I began to question some of those convictions, but there is one that has been a constant for me throughout my life. That conviction is best summarized by his parting words to me before he died: “Stan, be true to the Word.” My Dad would have loved it if I had been a carbon copy of him, but it’s significant that he did not ask for that—he admonished me to be true to the Bible, God’s Word written. I’ve never forgotten that.

But if one is to do that, it does not work to just swallow hook, line, and sinker what one reads in a book, a study Bible, or even what one’s pastor teaches (even if your pastor is your father, as in my case!). Let’s face it, there are many portions of Scripture that have more than one potentially viable meaning or interpretation. Since it’s the Bible that’s inspired, and not any one person’s interpretation, it’s important that when we read and study the Bible we understand how other devout and serious students through the centuries have understood the Bible, including those parts where different interpreters have come to different conclusions. To do so adequately, one needs guidance in knowing what the different possibilities of interpretation are.

Since graduating from seminary some 54 years ago, I have ministered as a pastor, college and seminary professor, and as a publisher of Christian books. No matter what my role, I’ve always done my best to follow my dying father’s wish—Stan, be true to the Word. And so, whether as a pastor-teacher, professor, or publisher, one of my goals has been to not only communicate what I believe, but to make sure my audience understands how other serious interpreters of the Bible have understood the passage or doctrinal issue in question. While I have my own convictions, ultimately I want my audience to come to their own conclusions based on the biblical evidence as they understand it.

Now, this is just a long way of explaining why I so appreciate the NIV Faithlife Study Bible. It gently but effectively guides the reader toward understanding the text of Scripture, and when appropriate, it briefly but clearly informs the reader of the possible interpretations in an even-handed manner. The NIV Faithlife Study Bible does this from Genesis to Revelation—from discussing the possible referents of the “sons of God” and the “daughters of humans” (Gen. 6:1-2), to the possible meanings of the Hebrew word translated as “virgin” (Isa. 7:14), to the implications of “the keys of the kingdom” (Matt. 16:19), to the three major interpretations of the 1,000-year reign of Christ (Rev. 20:1-7), and hundreds of similar explanatory notes from the first verse of Genesis to the last verse of the book of Revelation. My conclusion is that the NIV Faithlife Study Bible is a great tool for those believers who aspire to emulate the Jews at Berea who received the Apostle Paul’s message with great eagerness, but nevertheless “examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true” (Acts 17:11).


The NIV Faithlife Study Bible (Zondervan, 2017) is filled with innovative graphics, rich commentary, and insights from multiple points of view—all designed to inform readers’ faith and to engage their curiosity, no matter where they are on their faith journey. To learn more, visit www.NIVFaithlifeStudyBible.com.

Never Unfriended: An Interview with Lisa-Jo Baker

Lisa-Jo BakerIn a world where women can unfriend each other with the swipe of a finger, how do we find friendships that we can trust to last? What does the Bible say about the fear of feeling awkward and being rejected, left out, or hurt (again) that often keeps women from connecting in lasting friendships with each other?

Bible Gateway interviewed Lisa-Jo Baker (@lisajobaker) about her book, Never Unfriended: The Secret to Finding and Keeping Lasting Friendships (B&H Books, 2017).

Buy your copy of Never Unfriended in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

What are the two biggest obstacles that prevent women from connecting?

Lisa-Jo Baker: Two statements that we all probably say at least once a day but are two of the biggest obstacles to real connection: “I’m fine” and “I’m so busy.”

Nothing is riskier or more vulnerable than cracking open the doors of our messy, guest-unready homes, let alone the doors of our actual lives. We get so used to being neatly packaged people and stories and families that we can forget how to be anything but “fine” when someone asks. Because, deep down, there are messes much messier than the dust bunnies or gritty dishes. There are fears and doubts and despair and broken places that cut so deep it takes the breath away.

And so we wrap them up in pretty packages of “I’m fine,” like lipstick over trembling lips. We smile at birthday parties and playdates and in our cubicles. We smile at church during worship and when the pastor shakes our hand. We nod and smile and say we’re fine, the kids are fine, work is fine, marriage is fine, just fine, thanks for asking. And all the while there’s this big, messy, gaping wound bleeding raw right through our perfectly fine outfit that we hope no one notices. All the while desperate for somebody to care enough to see.

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, No More Faking Fine: An Interview with Esther Fleece]

Fine is so dangerous, isn’t it? Fine means the end of a conversation; the beginning of nothing. Now it’s time for the battle cry that if truth can set us free, it’s best to start living in those places. Maybe going first and admitting our un-fine isn’t a weakness, instead it’s a gift to the women around us who can finally exhale and admit their un-fine too.

Similarly, it’s brave and counter cultural to refuse to utter those three words we say without even thinking, “I’m too busy.” I don’t want to be too busy. I want to be available.

I’m a realist; I know it’s impossible to be available to everyone. But to the few God has trusted me with? The friends who do life with me and my people? I owe them my availability.

One of the ways our world of the fast and furious Internet hurts us is that so often our schedules and attention spans don’t have enough time to give each other uninterrupted hours of conversation. We’ll starve on a diet of conversations limited to 140 character Tweets, text messages, or Facebook quips. We need soul food conversations. The kind that don’t cut you off because they have another meeting to run to. The kind that lingers.

It’s taken me years of these kinds of conversations for the truth to permeate my paranoia about my house or my hair or my life—true friends will always make time and space for each other. Period.

What does the Bible teach about friendship?

Lisa-Jo Baker: When I breathe in and out, there it is, right beneath my ribcage, the promise that I’m capable of friendship because my very existence—20 breaths per minute—is drawn from the breath of the God whose entire existence is a living, breathing fellowship of three.

Friendship was breathed into our DNA at the very beginning. “In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God” John 1:1 (NIV). In the beginning. A perfect, triune friendship. Intimate. Safe. Beloved. Complete. And then God, out of the overflow of this full and satisfying relationship began the work of creation. And on the sixth day, God said, “Let us make man in our image, according to our likeness….So God created man in his own image; he created him in the image of God; he created them male and female” Genesis 1:26-27 (CSB).

And God breathed his own breath into us. Into us God breathed the desire for companionship. Into us God breathed the gift of community. Into us God breathed all the capacity for believing the best about each other, loving others more than ourselves, and making ourselves wildly vulnerable without fear of betrayal.

What are some examples of friends in the Bible?

Lisa-Jo Baker: In Luke 10, Jesus tells the story of a man who gets mugged and left for dead on the side of the road. (Or maybe in our case, the woman who gets beat up by the verbal attacks of the Internet, her roommates, the other mothers on the PTA, or her church family.) And instead of offering help, Jesus describes two people who literally looked the other way and kept right on walking. Two people who, according to their job descriptions, should have been the first to stop and care and comfort.

Instead, it’s the one person Jesus’ audience would never have expected who stops and loads up the stranger, takes him to the nearest hotel, and pays for his room, food, and care. The Samaritan is the unlikeliest helper in this scenario because he’s the one that Jesus’ audience—the Jewish religious elite, the famous, feted, and privileged—had ridiculed, rejected, and cut out of any invitations to participate in worship at their most sacred sites.

The Samaritan is the one person who would’ve been justified in holding onto his bitterness and rejection and ignoring the person in need of a friend.

But instead, the Samaritan in Jesus’ story physically embodied the second greatest commandment. Without judgment, without squeamishness, and with wholehearted generosity, the Samaritan loved this stranger/neighbor as himself. And myself doesn’t want to be left alone when I’m hurting. Myself doesn’t want to be rejected, uninvited, or abandoned. Myself desperately wants to be seen and feel connected and have people ache with me when I ache and celebrate with me when I celebrate.

That’s the heart-of-heart of biblical friendship—being willing to be a neighbor in the heart sense of the word is being willing to connect with the people that God puts in our path. It’s doing life together, especially the hard parts. It’s choosing friendship on purpose.

How should we follow Jesus’s friendship example?

Lisa-Jo Baker: Jesus sank his entire self into just 12 friends. A small circle. A circle that included hot heads and doubters and friends who would fall asleep when he needed them most. Friends who swore they’d never known him and sold out his friendship to people who wanted to kill him. Twelve men who were horribly imperfect, constantly misunderstood him, and were often inconvenient to him in the worst ways.

But Jesus didn’t leave, unlike, or unfriend a single one of them. Not even when they deserved it. Not even when they swore they’d never met him, didn’t know him, despised what he stood for. Instead, he kept on keeping his promise first made through Moses in Genesis, that he would never leave or forsake his people (Deuteronomy 31:6 (CSB)). Jesus kept on being a friend right up to, through, and across the bitter finish line and then continued to pursue them across the span of his own death and life again.

In his final prayer, his heartfelt correspondence with his Father God on the night before he would die, he testified to his own faithfulness as a friend to the 12 men he’d called by name: “While I was with them, I kept them in your name, which you have given me. I have guarded them, and not one of them has been lost except the son of destruction, that the Scripture might be fulfilled” (John 17:12 (ESV)).

Facebook might try to teach us that friendship is defined by how wide and far and massive our reach, our circles, and our name. But if we’ll only let Jesus’ example remind us that the kind of friend we are will always be measured by depth, by commitment, by being determined to keep trying over and over again.

Jesus could tell his Father in no uncertain terms, that as far as it was possible for him, he had kept the faith and the friendship of every one of the men entrusted to him. Even Judas had been included right up until the moment he chose to quit Jesus, not the other way around.

What are the friendship lies we tell ourselves and how can they be overcome?

Lisa-Jo Baker: The Internet has complicated our relationship with an already complicated fear: the fear of missing out or being left out, the fear of being excluded, rejected, or ignored. And the lie that it was done on purpose.

To decapitate the lie of being left out, we need to find its head. And if I pried open my heart, I believe I’d find two venomous fangs buried deep in that soft tissue pumping all the poison of a lifetime of the same message in a million different versions—the message that I’ve been left out on purpose—into my bloodstream and around my body with a vengeance.

I’m in desperate need of an antidote when I can’t trust my own heart. This is not a secret and it shouldn’t be a surprise. The ancient prophet, Jeremiah wrote, “The heart is more deceitful than anything else” (Jeremiah 17:9 (CSB)). There’s no one better at lying to ourselves than ourselves.

How many times have you opened Facebook or Instagram only to catch a glimpse of an event you didn’t know was happening in your town and that you weren’t invited to? Or that a friend was in the area and didn’t ever reach out to you? How many times have we translated those images into the assumption that it was done on purpose? That the failure to connect or invite or include was because we were somehow found lacking? How often have we jumped from a photograph to a full-page story in our own heads that stars us as the excluded victim?

But God is a heart-knower and he can liberate us from our hearts poisoned by the enemy’s lies. “I the Lord search the heart and examine the mind” (Jeremiah 17:9 (NIV)).

The great doctor, the great healer, the tender psychologist has the antidote to the lies we believe if we’ll only let him treat us. David—the shepherd, the youngest of seven sons, the poet and king, the musician, and the worrier like you and me—wrote, “You delight in truth in the inward being and to teach me wisdom in my inward paths” (Psalm 51:6 (ESV)).

Jesus—the way, the truth and the life—is the only one who can open up your secret heart and gently extract the fangs of poison that are lodged there; the only one who can decapitate the lie wrapped tight around our poor, gasping hearts. He’s promised that he will and we can hold him to it: “I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; I will remove your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh” (Ezekiel 36:26 (CSB)).

As the new heart does its work, pumping life and truth through us, hurt from exclusion will be drowned out by a new message: that, while it may have hurt when you didn’t get that invite to what “everyone else is doing, it feels so good to finally realize you’re good enough and worthy even without the invite,” as Alecia, an (in)courage blog reader, says.

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

Lisa-Jo Baker: In the writing of Never Unfriended, Bible Gateway was an invaluable resource. It was my go-to for unpacking the layers of context behind each verse I share and coloring in more historical details for my readers.

Is there anything else you’d like to say?

Lisa-Jo Baker: There’s no sugar coating it. Friendship can be terribly hard work. So I really appreciate the Bible being super frank about that. In fact, Jesus’ own brother wrote these words explaining just how hard it can be to live out healthy friendships—I feel like he really gets it:

Real wisdom, God’s wisdom, begins with a holy life and is characterized by getting along with others. It is gentle and reasonable, overflowing with mercy and blessings, not hot one day and cold the next, not two-faced. You can develop a healthy, robust community that lives right with God and enjoy its results only if you do the hard work of getting along with each other, treating each other with dignity and honor. James 3:17-18 (MSG) (emphasis mine).

And often it’s that very hardness that makes us think we’re doing it wrong. But the thing is, that hardness is a compass pointing us in the direction of what we’re doing right. Because it means we haven’t quit yet. It means we’ve decided to stick. It means we’re choosing not to unfriend with the swipe of a finger, but instead to give the gift of the do-over. It’s so worth it. Because it becomes the gift we didn’t realize we’re actually giving ourselves.


Bio: Lisa-Jo Baker has been the community manager for www.incourage.me, an online home for women all over the world, for nearly a decade. She is also the author of Surprised by Motherhood, and her writings have been syndicated from New Zealand to New York. She lives just outside Washington, DC, with her husband and their three very loud kids, where she connects, encourages and champions women in person and through her popular blog, lisajobaker.com.


Bible News Roundup – Week of April 2, 2017

Read this week’s Bible Gateway Weekly Brief newsletter
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Support Bible Gateway—Browse the Bible Gateway Store
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State of the Bible 2017: Top Findings
Barna
American Bible Society: News Release

Holy Week Text Messages to Tell Story of Easter in New Bible Society Australia Campaign
Sight Magazine
Read Bible Gateway Blog post, Bible Gateway “Holy Week” Infographic

“Quote Jesus” Campaign Displaying Words of Jesus on London Buses this Easter
Quote Jesus

The Centenary of The Scofield Reference Bible
Oxford University Press Blog
See Scofield Study Bibles in the Bible Gateway Store

Ghana Launches the Africa Study Bible
Ghana Business News
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Africa Study Bible Launches Worldwide Celebratory Events Planned throughout Africa and in the United States
See the Africa Study Bible in the Bible Gateway Store

Venice, Florida Volunteers Read Bible in a Marathon Session
Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Oneonta/Blount County, Alabama Bible Reading Marathon Proclamation for May 4–7
The Blount Countian

Church in Beijing to Carry Out “80-Hour Bible Reading” Activity During Passion Week
China Christian Daily
Read the Bible in Chinese on Bible Gateway

How the Bible Came Back to China
Eternity

Found: Fresh Clues to Mystery of King Solomon’s Mines
National Geographic
Read about King Solomon in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Biblical Archaeology Claim: Seal of Hezekiah Unearthed in Jerusalem
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Biblical Context for the Top Ten Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of 2015
See the Biblical Archaeology section in the Bible Gateway Store

28 New Dead Sea Scrolls Fragments Sold in US
Live Science

Bible Expo Ignites Members for Mission in Spain
Adventist Review

Leaf from Gutenberg Bible Donated to Library Collection
Hardin Simmons University

Meet Those Who “Love Jesus but Not the Church”
Barna

Family’s Bible left Unscathed After Lightning Damages Georgia Home
WSB-TV

Do You Speak Christianese?
PRI’s The World

Atheists and Highly Religious People Are the Least Scared of Death, Study Reveals
University of Oxford

A Bible and a Gun: The History of the Pony Express
National Catholic Register

See other Bible News Roundup weekly posts

April Exclusive: Get Full Access to the NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible with Bible Gateway Plus!

With a huge digital study library and an ad-free Scripture reading experience, Bible Gateway Plus is the best way to experience Bible Gateway. But this month, it’s getting even better: throughout April, the NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible is part of the Bible Gateway Plus study library!

The NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible is the perfect companion to your Easter Bible reading and study. You may have read the account of Jesus’ death and resurrection many times in your life. But how many behind-the-scenes details are you missing? The NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible uncovers all those fascinating background details and nuances. You’ll read even the most familiar Bible story with a whole new appreciation for its depth and meaning.

Like the 40+ other digital titles in the Bible Gateway Plus study library, the NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible is seamlessly integrated with your Scripture reading on Bible Gateway. It’s easy to see what it—or any of the other study Bibles and commentaries—has to say about the passage you’re reading.

If you’re a Bible Gateway Plus member, the NIV Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible is already in your study library—so go ahead and start exploring! (If you need a refresher course on how to access your study library, click here for a tutorial.)

If you’re not a member, start during a free trial period in which you’ll have full access to everything Bible Gateway Plus has to offer, including:

  • A complete digital Bible study library, with no expensive software to install.
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Breathe Bible Audio New Testament: An Interview with Kevin Sorbo

Kevin SorboThe Breathe Bible Audio New Testament is a vivid listening experience that transports you into the world of the Bible. Performed using the New Living Translation (NLT) by a cast of internationally acclaimed film, television, and recording artists, this captivating multi-million-dollar audio production features cinema-quality sound with an original music score. The 18-CD set also includes a code to receive the user-friendly mobile App for free.

[Sign up to receive in your email inbox the free audio devotional 10 Minutes with Jesus, consisting of the 16 chapters that comprise the Gospel of Mark, delivered to you one chapter a day]

Created by an award-winning team, this dramatic production features a cast of leading Hollywood entertainers, including Kevin Sorbo (Voice of God), Josh Lucas (Jesus), John Rhys-Davies (narrator), Ashley Judd (Mary Magdalene), Jesse McCartney (Matthew), Hill Harper (Mark), Corbin Bleu (John), Christian Stolte (Luke), Marshall Allman (John the Baptist), Wintley Phipps (Peter), and Bailee Madison (Young Mary Mother of Jesus), 600 supporting actors, a full-orchestral score, and cutting-edge sound design.

Bible Gateway interviewed Kevin Sorbo (@ksorbs) about the Breathe Bible Audio New Testament (Tyndale House, 2017).

Buy your copy of Breathe Bible Audio New Testament in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

In these divided and troubled times, how can something like the Breathe Bible play a role in making progress toward healing and greater peace in our culture?

Kevin Sorbo: Now more than ever we need God’s Word and ways to share it and engage with it. It was our vision with Breatheto create a dramatic Bible audio experience that speaks to peoples’ hearts. This is a Bible experience that people will really enjoy listening to. You’ll close your eyes and feel like you’re right there in the Bible event.

It seems that the cultural celebration of Christian holidays has become more secularized and commercial over time. How could the Breathe Bible help to make Easter more about Jesus and less about, for instance, chocolate bunnies?

Kevin Sorbo: The focus of Easter should be about Jesus coming to earth, being nailed to a cross on our behalf and rising from the dead three days later. Listening to Breathe, you’ll feel this experience and it will impact you. It’s really intense hearing the story retold through actors like Josh Lucas and feeling like you’re actually there. You hear the yelling, the chanting, the hurling of insults at Jesus before he was nailed to the cross and then you experience the astonishment and joy at the tomb. It’s an amazing audio experience.

Where did the idea for the Breathe Bible Audio New Testament come from? What was the vision for the project?

Kevin Sorbo: The producers of this project created the bestselling audio Bible made so far eight years ago and asked themselves “what can we do to take it to the next level?”. The answer kept coming back to the Bible translation. The New Living Translation (NLT) is amazingly clear and helps God’s Word come alive to the listener.

The explosive growth of technology has changed the way we live. Nearly everyone has their phone with them everywhere they go. We created the Breathe Bible so you can listen how you like. You can download the audio, get the app, or purchase the CD set and get a free app. It’s perfect to listen on your commute, during your work out, or at home. We wanted to leverage technology so that you can experience God’s Word everywhere you go.

What exactly is the Breathe Bible Audio New Testament? How is it different from what’s currently in the marketplace?

Kevin Sorbo: The Breathe Bible is an incredible Bible audio production of the New Testament that transports you into the world of the Bible. It’s performed by a cast of internationally acclaimed film, television, and recording artists complete with an original full-orchestral score. It was created utilizing the most up-to-date technology.

It’s also the first audio Bible that provides a CD set along a code to download the free app, so you can really listen how you like—whether you’re in your car, at the gym, or doing your devotions in the morning.

It’s unique in that it’s the only major Bible audio product that features the New Living Translation. The text really speaks to peoples’ hearts like nothing I’ve ever heard.

How do you foresee a listener engaging with the Breathe Bible?

Kevin Sorbo: That’s what’s so great about Breathe! If you’re a commuter like me and have to travel for work, it’s awesome to take on the go. You can listen while you’re at the gym or taking a walk or home with your kids. It’s a great way to engage with God’s Word.

Practically speaking, how can people use this audio Bible to prepare their hearts for Easter in an innovative new way? What’s the challenge you’re asking people to take with the Breathe Bible?

Kevin Sorbo: I want to challenge everyone to put Jesus back in Easter. The resurrection of Jesus is the most important event in the history of the world. But it’s become too easy to think of Easter as a spring holiday with bunnies and flowers. Instead, let’s challenge ourselves to focus on the truly important point of Easter by listening to the story of Jesus’s life on earth.

I want to challenge people to listen to the 10 Minutes with Jesus devotion available here on Bible Gateway as a free email devotional. It’s 16 chapters of the Gospel of Mark out of the Breathe Bible—one chapter a day—culminating on Easter, April 16, with the story of Jesus’ resurrection.

And it doesn’t cost a penny—and only takes 10 minutes a day. It’s great for churches, small groups, and families. So that’s my challenge to your readers—let’s put Jesus back in Easter.

In the past, not all Christian film and media have necessarily been on par with mainstream Hollywood productions. This has been a passion of yours for a while—to elevate the quality of Christian media. How did this goal play into the Breathe Bible project?

Kevin Sorbo: As you know, with my movie God’s Not Dead, one of our goals was to take Christian entertainment to a whole new level. And now with the Breathe Bible—we’re taking Bible audio to the next level.

This is an audio recording of the New Testament that includes cinema-quality audio. It features an award-winning cast of 90 internationally acclaimed film, television, and recording artists—voices like John Rhys-Davies, Josh Lucas, and so on.

The audio quality of the Breathe Bible is so good it’s almost like you’re right there in Bible times with the people who are talking.

Can you elaborate on the actors involved in the project?

Kevin Sorbo: The voice talent includes some incredible actors including Josh Lucas, John Rhys-Davies, Corbin Bleu, Christian Stolte, Hill Harper, and a lot more. They do an amazing job. One of my favorite pieces is of Corbin Bleu reading from the book of John chapter one. A clip can be heard on the BreatheBible.com It gives you a taste of the audio quality and the smoothness of the New Living Translation (NLT). Another example I love is Marshall Allman reading from John—you can immediately get a grasp of his passion playing the role of John the Baptist and hear the original score in the background.

This is the New Testament in audio form. Any plans to create the same experience with the Old Testament?

Kevin Sorbo: Absolutely – the Old Testament will come next.

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

Kevin Sorbo: I greatly appreciate your ministry and commitment to equipping readers with God’s Word through innovative resources and engagement campaigns. You’re impacting lives worldwide with the gospel.

I want to invite the Bible Gateway community and their friends to take the 10 Minutes with Jesus challenge. It’s a great way to prepare your heart for Easter and will enable you to experience God’s Word in a fresh, new way. Then, join me for a Bible Gateway Facebook Live Event on April 12th!

Is there anything else you’d like to say?

Kevin Sorbo: Thank you for allowing me to join you today on the Bible Gateway Blog. I want to encourage everyone to sign up for the 10 Minutes with Jesus Challenge and join us for the Bible Gateway Facebook Live Event on April 12th. If you’d like to learn more about the Breathe Bible visit www.breathebible.com.


Bio: Kevin Sorbo is best known for his roles in Hercules, Andromeda, and God’s Not Dead. He’s the spokesperson for A World Fit for Kids!, a nonprofit that helps prepare young people for fit and fulfilling lives. You can follow him on Facebook and Twitter.

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