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Make your Bible study more effective, more organized, and more relevant! Bible Study Magazine delivers tools and methods for Bible study, as well as insights from respected Bible teachers, professors, historians, and archaeologists. In every 52-page issue, you’ll get sound advice and enriching insights from the pastors and scholars who have spent a lifetime applying the Bible to their lives and teaching others how to do the same.
Expand your study of the Bible, and discover new insights from God’s Word! Read pastor profiles, author interviews, and stories of individuals whose thoughtful engagement with Scripture has shaped their thinking and defined their ministries. Bible Study Magazine reveals the impact of God’s Word on their lives and the power of Scripture in yours.
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“His story teaches us something profound: that the life of faith is a journey made up of a series of ‘first steps.’ While each of these steps brings us closer to the fulfillment of God’s promises, they don’t necessarily lead us farther away from the challenges and struggles involved with moving ahead.” (Volume 10, Number 2, Page 43)
“These are ‘stories of resistance to cultural and spiritual assimilation of a minority by a dominant foreign power.’4” (Volume 10, Number 2, Page 26)
“As communicators of the gospel we can’t just say, ‘Pray this prayer, ‘Jesus, come into my heart.’ ’ We have to say, ‘You have to make the decision: ‘Am I going to give myself fully to Jesus, as he gave himself fully to me, and therefore, whatever he loves, I will love, and whatever he hates, I’ll hate?’ Or do you just want to have Jesus with all your lovers from the world?’” (Volume 10, Number 1, Page 13)
“The root of comparison is pride and the fear of man. Comparison positions us to be resistant to God. Scripture says God gives grace to the humble, but he resists the proud (Jas 4:6). Comparison puts us in a place where we are insecure and struggle with the fear of man. We end up concerned about self-image instead of God-awareness.” (Volume 10, Number 1, Page 12)
“As early as the Second Temple Period (roughly 515 BC to AD 70), Jewish apocalyptic writings bear witness to the idea that angels have their own esoteric, non-human language. Another view, from after the New Testament period, was that angels spoke Hebrew, the language of God according to the rabbis.” (Volume 10, Number 2, Page 8)
. . . a serious, clearly written [publication] that uses biblical scholarship to illuminate but not refute the principal beliefs of evangelical Protestantism. . . . [It] is to Bible studies what Scientific American is to science or Psychology Today to psychology. A thoughtful bridge between the work of scholars and laypersons looking for a deeper understanding of the biblical texts.
—Steve Black
5 ratings
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