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New Audio Bible: Holman Christian Standard Bible NT

Here at Bible Gateway, we strive to provide you with the Bible resources you need for your spiritual walk. To do so, we are constantly adding new content for you to access from home. Today we’re proud to announce the addition of another translation to our library of free audio Bibles: the Holman Christian Standard Bible New Testament, read by Dale McConachie.

Employing an innovative translation technique titled “Optimal Equivalence,” the Holman Christian Standard Bible aims for both “literary precision” and “emotive clarity”—which allows translators to preserve not only the meaning of the text, but the original words themselves.

If you’d like to know more about the history and nature of this translation, you can read more about it on the blog. If you’d rather jump in and listen, then go try out the audio Holman Christian Standard Bible NT.

The NIV Couple’s Devotional Starts Saturday

The first installment of the NIV Couple’s Devotional goes out this Saturday. Be sure to sign up to receive it for free!

The NIV Couple’s Devotional is a series of essays on difficult relationship issues like conflict resolution and saying no. Each essay is followed by a set of practical questions you and your partner can work through in order to better understand each other and your relationship.

Here’s an excerpt from the first devotional on regret and how to deal with it in relationships:

If you routinely catch yourself starting a sentence with “If only,” regret may be an issue you need to deal with. While dwelling on what might have been is never healthy, regret can be an important signal to stop and examine your emotions. For instance, if you catch yourself thinking, “If only I had married Jake instead of John,” it may be time to evaluate why John isn’t measuring up. In your private time with God, pray about the emotions you’re experiencing. Perhaps you’ll discover that your disappointment is springing from unmet needs. With these needs clarified, you can then have a forward-thinking conversation with your spouse about how to improve your relationship.

Sign up today to get the rest of this devotional on Saturday!

New Poll: Does Your Pastor Refer to the Original Greek or Hebrew During Sermons?

Thanks to everyone who took the time to vote in last week’s poll question! We asked “Do you meet with someone regularly to talk about your spirituality?” Here are the results:

Do you regularly meet with someone to discuss spirituality?

Yes: 64%
No: 36%

A healthy majority of you said that, yes, you do make time in your schedule talk to someone else about your spiritual life. As one of the “yes”s, I’ve found this to be a rewarding practice. I often find myself articulating truths about my spiritual life that would have never occurred to me without having a trusted ear to listen. And being a listener for someone else is a tremendous privilege.

That brings us to this week’s new poll question:

Does Your Pastor Refer to the Original Greek or Hebrew During Their Sermons?

  • Yes (82%, 1,496 Votes)
  • No (18%, 327 Votes)

Total Voters: 1,823

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Chances are your pastor took a few classes on both if they completed an M.Div or PhD program on their journey to ministry. Maybe the last time they looked up a Strong’s number was the night before their last final exam; or maybe the Bible’s original languages come up in every sermon they preach. Share your answer in the poll above, and we’ll report on the result next week.

New Email Devotions for Moms and Couples

Two new weekly devotional newsletters have joined our library of free email resources: NIV Devotions for Moms and NIV Devotions for Couples!

You can probably guess what their focus is: showing you how to apply Biblical teachings and insight to your family relationships. NIV Devotions for Moms (begins Monday, September 19) examines the role of Biblical motherhood, encouraging you to understand motherhood within the context of a life lived for Christ. Whether you’re a new mom struggling to cope with late-night baby feedings or a mother whose kids left the nest long ago, you’ll find inspiration in the Bible’s teachings about motherhood. NIV Devotions for Couples (begins Saturday, September 24) likewise looks at what the Bible teaches about healthy relationships between couples.

They fit well alongside the other Bible study newsletters in our library, which explore what the Bible has to say about the different roles each of us assume at different points in our lives: student, leader, stewards, and more.

Both newsletters begin next week—sign up today!

Sounds of Inspiration: Free Audio Devotionals Now Available on Bible Gateway

Trouble finding the time for daily devotions? When every day is at least one hour too short and life is too hectic to make a proper breakfast, taking a few minutes to focus on the Bible is a challenge for many of us. To help you make daily devotions a part of your busy day, we’ve added a new free resource to Bible Gateway’s library: audio devotionals!

These new audio devotionals make it easy to benefit from a worthwhile devotion while you’re getting dressed in the morning, packing the kids off to school, or just brushing your teeth before bed. Run times range from five minutes to a half hour, so there’s always a devotion to fit your schedule.

To get started, go to the Devotionals page on Bible Gateway. Scroll down to the Devotional Audio section, and simply click on the one you want to listen to. The devotional will open in the Bible Gateway audio player and begin playing.

There are currently three audio devotionals available. Choose between:

The Story of Jesus
The Story of Jesus is a compelling, easy-to-follow presentation that is rooted in the clear, accessible language of the NIV. Revealing and insightful, this is the Jesus story in a concise, single narrative.

Eternal Words
Music and Scripture that will bring joy to your heart and peace to your soul, arranged topically using the NIV.

Witness the Bible: Genesis to Jesus
Walk through the Bible with your children in these action-packed, radio theatre-style dramatizations from the 1599 Geneva Bible.

Audio Bibles have long been a popular part of Bible Gateway, but these audio devotionals represent a new resource for us. We hope you find them helpful in your everyday spiritual walk!

New Poll: Do You Regularly Meet with Someone to Discuss Your Spirituality?

In our last poll we asked how often your church celebrates communion. Thanks to everyone who took the time to vote! Here are the results:

How often does your church celebrate communion?

Monthly (53%, 303 Votes)
Every week (25%, 142 Votes)
Quarterly (12%, 67 Votes)
Bi-weekly (5%, 28 Votes)
Yearly (3%, 15 Votes)
Bi-yearly (2%, 10 Votes)
Never (0%, 8 Votes)
Total Voters: 573

I found it interesting to see the wide range of responses to this question! The majority of you responded that communion is a monthly event at your church, about 25% said weekly and a little over 12% said quarterly.

This week we’d like to know whether or not you meet with someone on a regular basis to talk about spiritual matters. Maybe it’s a formal meeting with an accountability partner every week, or maybe it’s a more informal coffeeshop meeting with a friend every other month. We just want to know if discussing your spiritual lives is something you make a regular point to do:

Do you regularly meet with someone to discuss spirituality?

  • Yes (64%, 649 Votes)
  • No (36%, 358 Votes)

Total Voters: 1,007

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Remembering 9/11: Finding Hope in God in the Aftermath of Tragedy

Ten years ago today, terror struck New York—and set millions of people, Christian and non-Christian alike, in search of a spiritual answer to the horror. Church attendance spiked (for a time); Bible passages were scoured for words of solace or hints of an explanation; a flood of articles and sermons addressed the age-old “problem of evil;” the religion of Islam suddenly became a topic of everyday conversation among American Christians who until that point had never had much cause to consider it.

Violence, terrorism, and murder were hardly new to the American (and human) experience, but the sheer perverse theatricality of the 9/11 attacks made it hard not to imagine that there wasn’t some kind of cosmic or spiritual message lurking behind them. Some Christians wondered if the terror strikes were a “wake-up” call to repentance, or even a divine punishment for sin.

Such explanations might have held some immediate appeal when smoke and rubble still scarred Ground Zero. But neither of those explanations seemed to fit the nature of the God of the Bible, who mourned alongisde the hurting and submitted himself to unspeakable violence out of love for mankind.

The Biblical book of Psalms was quoted a lot in the months following 9/11—and it’s not hard to see why. Many of the psalms, particularly David’s cries to God for justice and security, are a perfect model of the Christian response to tragedy. See Psalm 27, where David asks God to deliver him from enemies: his ultimate hope and comfort is not in wartime victory or physical safety (although he may hope for those)… but in the goodness of God.

The LORD is my light and my salvation—
whom shall I fear?
The LORD is the stronghold of my life—
of whom shall I be afraid?

When the wicked advance against me
to devour me,
it is my enemies and my foes
who will stumble and fall.
Though an army besiege me,
my heart will not fear;
though war break out against me,
even then I will be confident.

One thing I ask from the LORD,
this only do I seek:
that I may dwell in the house of the LORD
all the days of my life,
to gaze on the beauty of the LORD
and to seek him in his temple.
For in the day of trouble
he will keep me safe in his dwelling;
he will hide me in the shelter of his sacred tent
and set me high upon a rock. […]

I remain confident of this:
I will see the goodness of the LORD
in the land of the living.
Wait for the LORD;
be strong and take heart
and wait for the LORD.
(Psalm 27, NIV)

The Bible contains many stories of injustice, tragedy, and suffering inflicted on God’s people. The afflicted people respond with all the emotions we would expect: anger, disbelief, fear, indignation, and even doubt in God’s sovereignty.

These are the same emotions that flood through our minds even today, ten years after the event, as we remember watching those twin towers fall. But time and time again, the Bible writers remind themselves—and us—that God is in control, and that our most important spiritual response to tragedy is to look to God’s endless love and incomprehensible faithfulness:

I will never forget this awful time,
as I grieve over my loss.
Yet I still dare to hope
when I remember this:

The faithful love of the Lord never ends!
His mercies never cease.
Great is his faithfulness;
his mercies begin afresh each morning.
(Lamentations 3:20-23, NLT)

To turn your face to God in the aftermath of tragedy is to defy the power of evil, and to place your hope in the one Person who can bring good out of even the most horrifying disaster. As you think back on the 9/11 attacks today and in the future, may your sorrow and mourning point you to the glorious hope of Jesus Christ, and the restoration he promises.

At the Bible Gateway page on Facebook, Bible Gateway readers are sharing the Bible passages they turned to in the aftermath of 9/11. Join the discussion!

Two New Bible Translations Now Available on Bible Gateway: The J.B. Phillips NT and ESV Anglicised

We’re happy to announce that two new Bibles have been added to Bible Gateway!

The first is the J.B. Phillips New Testament. J.B. Phillips began work on this translation during the London Blitz after seeing the youth in his church struggle with the Authorized Version. He completed and published the New Testament in 1958. You can get an idea of the flavor of the translation by reading the first five verses of John:

At the beginning God expressed himself. That personal expression, that word, was with God, and was God, and he existed with God from the beginning. All creation took place through him, and none took place without him. In him appeared life and this life was the light of mankind. The light still shines in the darkness and the darkness has never put it out.

If you’re interested, you can read more about the J.B. Phillips New Testament or start reading the gospel of Matthew.

The second new addition to our library is the English Standard Version Anglicised. This Anglicised version of the popular ESV Bible is largely the same text as the ESV already on Bible Gateway, but its use of British spelling conventions should make it easier on the eyes for our friends in the UK. For example, see the spelling differences in John 5:22-23:

ESV Anglicised
The Father judges no one, but has given all judgement to the Son, that all may honour the Son, just as they honour the Father. Whoever does not honour the Son does not honour the Father who sent him.

ESV
The Father judges no one, but has given all judgment to the Son, that all may honor the Son, just as they honor the Father. Whoever does not honor the Son does not honor the Father who sent him.

You can read more about the ESV Anglicised, or start reading in Genesis.

Link Roundup: Glo Bible, Well-Designed Bibles, and More

Here’s a list of a few interesting links we’ve run across over the past week:

Meet the “Cloud of Witnesses” With Our New “Faithful Through the Ages” Newsletter

Who were the great men and women of church history? Faithful Through the Ages, our newest weekly email newsletter, looks at the individuals God used throughout history to build and shape His church.

God has always used interesting and unlikely people to carry out His will on earth. Preachers, artists, kings, and outcasts; rich and poor; famous and obscure—God has called servants from every walk of life to spread the Gospel and preserve the church. Faithful Through the Ages picks up where our popular “Men of the Bible” and “Women of the Bible” newsletters leave off, and highlights influential Christians who have served God in the two thousands years since the time of the early church.

Faithful Through the Ages is your chance to meet this motley crew of influential believers, and to learn more about the “cloud of witnesses” whose lives and faith paved the way for the Christian church as we know it today. The newsletter begins tomorrow, Friday, September 2—sign up now!

Faithful Through the Ages is drawn from Ruth Tucker’s Parade of Faith: A Biographical History of the Christian Church. It makes a great companion to our free Men of the Bible and Women of the Bible newsletters.