Featured Projects

  • Read the Bible Aloud

    Some of the most fun I've had in my Bible study time has been sustained periods of shouting God's Word aloud. Throughout Scripture God calls His people to response and action, and often a spoken word is the simplest form of response. Putting God's Word in your mouth and ears may be the most effective way of placing it within your heart.

  • Moleskine Notebook Bible

    Create an interleaved Bible by pasting alternating pages from old abused paperback editions into a large plain notebook. With a little ingenuity and some old Bibles and some household items you can have a study tool similar to Jonathan Edward's blank Bible.

  • Creating Cross References

    One of the most common ways to take notes in your Bible is to create your own cross-references in the margins, linking verses that interpret and illuminate each other. Often the process and order of creating these cross references leads to new revelation as topics connect and diverge, one theme leads to another and the relationship between topics in the Word often brings light.

  • Newsletters

    My monthly newsletter articles feature the fruits of study and obedience to fulfill God's call as an urban missionary in the Metro Detroit area. The newsletter posts feature the opening article and a link to the full newsletter and to old newsletters. The articles focus on discovering intimacy and passion on the urban mission field and in Muslim Ministry.

  • Christ's Commands: Amplified Bible

    This highlighting project didn't start out with a complex color scheme, but grew from the desire to focus on a single subject. Jesus makes an unequivocal statement in John 14:15 that constantly challenged me as a young believer and continues to stir me and burn me today: "If you love me you will keep my commandments."p>

  • Homemade KJV Looseleaf

    printkjv.ifbweb.com offers free Microsoft word and Plain Text files of the entire KJV. This means that the text block can reformatted and printed it any way. It also features the books of the Bible in individual documents so you can print an individual book to look at. Perhaps the most obvious use of this resource is the creation of an interleaf Bible.p>

Thursday, May 27, 2010

New Poll: How Often Do You Read the Whole Bible?

The new poll is up and running. How often do you read the whole Bible? I decided to keep the options rather limited; we'll just look at some basic information. Normally I would never ask these kinds of questions, but the poll is anonymous and I'm interested in how readers attack The Book. There are many times when I've felt the need to read vast amounts of scripture per day and many times when I felt that God wanted me to focus and meditate on a very small portion. This poll will be up for a month. Look left!

4 comments:

  1. I tried to vote, but I'm not able to get this one to work.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hmm, I'm not sure what the trouble is. I tested it and it seems to work.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I can't get it to work for some reason?

    I became a Christian late in 2000 and read the NT that year. Starting in 2001 I've read through the entire Bible every year, though not always in the same way or method. This year is my first traditional Genesis-Revelation read through since 2001.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sorry Jason, this is an old poll. The picture fools people, which is why I stopped posting pictures in the poll posts. The current, functioning poll is to the left.

    ReplyDelete