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Bible Student Toolkit
Recommended Bible Study Tools
For Those Who Desire To Truly Be Like The Bereans Of Acts 17:11
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Please note: the links for the bibles and books listed below take you to
Amazon.com. I
am not promoting them but rather providing a link to descriptions and typical
discounted prices. You may wish to buy elsewhere and perhaps save money by
buying used at ebay.com or
elsewhere. Amazon.com now offers used books for
sale through independent vendors. Their book listings will display a link indicating that a used copy
is for sale - if one is available.
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"I have more understanding than all my teachers: for thy testimonies are my meditation."
[Psalms 119:99] |
Bibles:
- The King James Bible - You can't study the bible without a
bible. I recommend the KJV since it is a very good translation, one of the
best English translations, even if you may think the English is a bit hard
to understand. You may wish to get a bible with a flexible cover
(leather or leatherette) for durability and one with large print (if you
plan to read it a lot). Also, it can be helpful to get one with center
column cross-references to other verses. Avoid getting a
"study" bible that has commentary notes. A lot of those notes may
be inaccurate and outright false. As for the "readability" of the
King James bible, you will be able to understand it just fine if you read it
enough. We have links to articles that discuss and review bible
versions at this page:
http://www.comingintheclouds.org/studyhelps/versions.htm The "Cambridge" publishing company tends to have some of the
best KJV bibles around. You can find out about them at the link for Baker
Book House on this web page:
http://www.comingintheclouds.org/studyhelps/bibles.htm#sellers
- Young's Literal Translation Of The Bible - If you want to know why you should
obtain this
English Bible, translated by Robert Young about 100 years ago, just read the
introductory material to this Bible at this link:
http://comingintheclouds.org/youngs/youngs.htm
You will see that this
Bible is simply a more accurate translation than the KJV, whether you want
to hear that or not. The more I look into the KJV the more it seems
that the main reason why King James commissioned it to be translated was
to get people to stop using the Geneva bible since the king did not like
certain statements in the
commentary in the Geneva bible. Not only that, the KJV translators had their
human biases, and their work, being split among so many men, explains why
certain Greek and Hebrew words were inconsistently translated into a wide
variety of English words. Even so, the KJV is still very faithful to the most
important of all doctrines, the doctrines of grace, unlike the modern
English versions which contain the mistranslated phrase "faith in
Christ" when it should read "faith of Christ" as
properly rendered in the KJV (Gal 2:16 & Php 3:9).
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The Geneva Bible - This bible preceded the King James Version.
The king of England did not like some of the notes in the Geneva bible, in
particular those that subjugated the authority of kings to the authority of
God, so he commissioned the production of the "Authorized Version" which we
now call the KJV.
Study Bibles:
Nowadays there are at least a couple of "fairly" reliable study Bibles
available from "Reformed" authors. MarArthur's is far more
detailed than Sproul's. In any case, commentaries are not inspired
by God so there are bound so be some issues that producers of Study bibles
have missed the mark on.
Concordances: Concordances are like an index to the words in your
Bible. They help you find all the places in your Bible where a particular
word is used. Concordances are not available for all Bible versions, only
the more popular versions. Here are two good concordances for the KJV
Bible:
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Cruden's Complete Concordance by Alexander
Cruden - A compact yet very helpful concordance for locating verses in the
Bible.
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Nave's Topical Bible by Orville J. Nave (groups verses by topic not by
word so it can help you find verses easier than a concordance if you don't
know all the exact Bible words pertaining to the subject you are studying.
- Strong's Exhaustive Concordance Of The Bible - This concordance is the most popular
of the concordances. This concordance is better at helping you find every English word
in the KJV than the Young's.
I DO NOT recommend the new "compact" version. It leaves things out
that are in the original "monster" sized version. Strong's
concordance requires you to go to the appendix to locate the original Greek
or Hebrew word while Young's has the original "root" word right
there with the English word in the main section.
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Young's
Analytical Concordance Of The Bible - this
excellent resource, written by Robert Young, the author of Young's Literal
translation of the Bible. His concordance is based on
the KJV and organizes words differently than the Strong's concordance. It
lists them by English words in alphabetic order as does Strong's, however,
the English words are according to the original Greek or Hebrew root
words so you can really know if it a word is the same "root" word
in the original Greek or Hebrew.
Young's concordance also has a helpful listing of phonetic spellings of all the Greek and Hebrew
along with all the English words each Greek or Hebrew word was translated to
and the number of times each English word appears.
Interlinears: There are a few Bibles that include the original
Greek and Hebrew words above and below the lines of English text. This
can be helpful when doing "word" studies to see how various words were
translated out of the original languages. As with concordances,
interlinears are not available for all Bible versions, only the more commonly
used Bibles.
- Jay Green's Greek & Hebrew
Interlinear Bible - This interlinear uses Green's own "Literal" translation of the
Bible, not the KJV. However, since the English text is directly
above or below the Greek and Hebrew text you can get a much better
understanding of what the translators did when they translated the languages
of the original manuscripts into English and you might actually learn some
Greek and Hebrew in the process.
Study Guides: There are various books and booklets describing
"how" to study the Bible and interpret passages of scripture. There are
several schools of thought on the proper way to interpret scripture.
Family Radio is partly right about it. They emphasize comparing scripture
with scripture, which is a good thing to do. However, they (Harold Camping
in particular) goes a bit too far when saying that the Bible is its own
dictionary. If you don't know English, you can stare all day at a book
written in English, and it will not teach you English (or the meanings of the
English words), even if that book is the Bible. Bible Dictionaries:
Bible dictionaries provide information about specific words in the Bible.
Often they provide a description of Bible names and places. Some Bible
dictionaries have pictures of the object being described or a map of a place
being named. Some dictionaries give an explanation of the meaning of a
person's Hebrew name in the Old Testament. A few of the more popular Bible
dictionaries include:
Bible Study Software:
- The Word From On-Line Bible
- This
excellent freeware bible software contains some of the best computer Bible study tools you can find even
in the versions that cost a lot of money. It includes excellent verse
cross-references (called the "treasury of scripture knowledge"
module), Greek and Hebrew lexicons (essential if you wish to do serious word
studies) along with the KJV text, MKJV text, Young's literal translation,
and Easton's Bible Dictionary. ALL free for download at this link:
http://www.online-bible.com/index.html
I also recommend their very exhaustive commentary by
John Gill which you can download from here:
http://www.ccel.org/olb/
Bible Commentaries:
Commentaries are books that attempt to interpret the Bible or parts of the
Bible. There are LOTS of Bible commentaries on the market today. Some are
very good and some are way off base on many important Bible doctrines.
Some cover the entire Bible and some only address one book of the Bible.
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"Where no counsel is,
the people fall: but in the multitude of counsellors there is
safety." [Proverbs 11:14] |
For anyone interested in serious Bible study, good commentaries can be
very helpful. They can point you to many verses related to a
passage you are studying. They can help you apply a Bible verse to
your life. They can also mislead you. It is best to be very
careful of which commentaries you use. Not all commentators are
"Reformed" and so they may have a wrong view of some very significant
Bible doctrines, such as God's sovereignty and man's total depravity.
The following commentaries are pretty reliable, yet they are not
divinely inspired so keep that in mind as you utilize these Bible study aids.
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Don't forget to be a Berean and check out anything you read in a
commentary! |
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