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Ten Points For Reading Scripture


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#1 BarbaraTherese

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Posted 20 June 2012 - 04:10 AM

*
CRAZY DOPE POST, YO!

I came across these ten points for reading The Bible on the USCCB website. Also, on another site, this quote from Edith Stein :

“The nation doesn’t simply need what we have. It needs what we are.”
-St. Teresia Benedicta (Edith Stein)…


http://www.usccb.org...ding-the-bible/

  • Bible reading is for Catholics. The Church encourages Catholics to make reading the Bible part of their daily prayer lives. Reading these inspired words, people grow deeper in their relationship with God and come to understand their place in the community God has called them to in himself.
  • Prayer is the beginning and the end. Reading the Bible is not like reading a novel or a history book. It should begin with a prayer asking the Holy Spirit to open our hearts and minds to the Word of God. Scripture reading should end with a prayer that this Word will bear fruit in our lives, helping us to become holier and more faithful people.
  • Get the whole story! When selecting a Bible, look for a Catholic edition. A Catholic edition will include the Church's complete list of sacred books along with introductions and notes for understanding the text. A Catholic edition will have an imprimatur notice on the back of the title page. An imprimatur indicates that the book is free of errors in Catholic doctrine.
  • The Bible isn't a book. It's a library. The Bible is a collection of 73 books written over the course of many centuries. The books include royal history, prophecy, poetry, challenging letters to struggling new faith communities, and believers' accounts of the preaching and passion of Jesus. Knowing the genre of the book you are reading will help you understand the literary tools the author is using and the meaning the author is trying to convey.
  • Know what the Bible is – and what it isn't. The Bible is the story of God's relationship with the people he has called to himself. It is not intended to be read as history text, a science book, or a political manifesto. In the Bible, God teaches us the truths that we need for the sake of our salvation.
  • The sum is greater than the parts. Read the Bible in context. What happens before and after – even in other books – helps us to understand the true meaning of the text.
  • The Old relates to the New. The Old Testament and the New Testament shed light on each other. While we read the Old Testament in light of the death and resurrection of Jesus, it has its own value as well. Together, these testaments help us to understand God's plan for human beings.
  • You do not read alone. By reading and reflecting on Sacred Scripture, Catholics join those faithful men and women who have taken God's Word to heart and put it into practice in their lives. We read the Bible within the tradition of the Church to benefit from the holiness and wisdom of all the faithful.
  • What is God saying to me? The Bible is not addressed only to long-dead people in a faraway land. It is addressed to each of us in our own unique situations. When we read, we need to understand what the text says and how the faithful have understood its meaning in the past. In light of this understanding, we then ask: What is God saying to me?
  • Reading isn't enough. If Scripture remains just words on a page, our work is not done. We need to meditate on the message and put it into action in our lives. Only then can the word be "living and effective."(Hebrews 4:12).


#2 sixpence

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Posted 20 June 2012 - 08:56 PM

When I read the title, I though I was going to get ten points for reading... :(

#3 BarbaraTherese

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Posted 21 June 2012 - 04:57 AM

:bananarap: LOL - and ten gratitude points with a "Thank you" for opening my thread................ I gave you a one prop (all I can do!) for such an informative post. When I read your post, and then the title of my thread, I had to laugh at choosing such a misleading title! :flex:

Yep! all this nation needs is what we are!

Edited by BarbaraTherese, 21 June 2012 - 04:58 AM.


#4 tinytherese

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Posted 21 June 2012 - 05:32 PM

When I read the title, I though I was going to get ten points for reading... :(


10 points from Gryffindor!

#5 Papist

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Posted 22 June 2012 - 09:12 AM

When I read the title, I though I was going to get ten points for reading... :(


:console: Cheer up. Your post is worth 10 points.

#6 Papist

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Posted 22 June 2012 - 09:13 AM

.

I came across these ten points for reading The Bible on the USCCB website. Also, on another site, this quote from Edith Stein :

“The nation doesn’t simply need what we have. It needs what we are.”
-St. Teresia Benedicta (Edith Stein)…

http://www.usccb.org...ding-the-bible/


Thanks for sharing. This is cooI, even though all the bullet points are 1.

#7 BarbaraTherese

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Posted 23 June 2012 - 01:26 AM

.


Thanks for sharing. This is cooI, even though all the bullet points are 1.


Oh dear! Teach me to post when in a rush, wont it! :)............and if only all my faults and failings, mistakes and errors, foot-in-mouth-disease symptoms were related to bullet points only!!! :)

#8 Archaeology cat

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Posted 23 June 2012 - 04:42 PM

Very good post.

#9 TheresaThoma

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Posted 26 June 2012 - 09:11 PM

Very nice!

#10 i<3franciscans

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Posted 05 July 2012 - 03:11 PM

Thanks for posting this. My friend and I are reading the Bible front to back this summer and let me tell you, it is really helpful having someone to discuss it with! Happy Reading!

#11 FuturePriest387

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Posted 05 July 2012 - 03:20 PM

When I read the title, I though I was going to get ten points for reading... :(


Pfft. Warning points maybe... :P

This is really razzle dazzle, though. I read the Bible every time I pray the Rosary, but I have been slacking on my reading of it during other times. To be fair, I am in the middle of Deuteronomy...

#12 timwho

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Posted 05 July 2012 - 03:42 PM

there's only one point :P

#13 tinytherese

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Posted 06 July 2012 - 01:01 PM

Leviticus isn't easy to get into.

#14 tinytherese

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Posted 06 July 2012 - 01:02 PM

Ten points from my laptop for double posting.

Edited by tinytherese, 06 July 2012 - 01:03 PM.


#15 i<3franciscans

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Posted 12 July 2012 - 01:16 PM

Leviticus isn't easy to get into.

I know!!!!

#16 PadrePioOfPietrelcino

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Posted 12 July 2012 - 10:44 PM

Leviticus isn't easy to get into.


Leviticus is my favorite book. The key for me is thinking deeply and often researching anthropological lay WHY God is setting the requirements and limits he does. Not just what. In many was Leviticus is like the Cannon Law for the Hebrew people. We must seek to understand the pastoral nature and the whys of both in order protect ourselves from becoming like the Pharasees.

#17 BarbaraTherese

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Posted 14 July 2012 - 10:06 PM

I read the Bible from cover to cover before my First Communion (our family Bible was left to me after my parents' death). I do remember some books being a hard labour of reading defeating any understanding whatsoever on my part, but I did persevere and read every word. Being of stubborn mind, it was what I set out to do and come hell or high water!
Somehow I understood it overall as a people being chosen and prepared by God and through constant unfaithfulness of His People, punished, repented, forgiven (and there are also some funny stories in the OT!), then in the New Testament - what they were being prepared for (life and death, resurrection of Jesus) and then what happened afterwards and this seemed even more mysterious to me than earlier reading. It was not until my twenties I think it must have been that I fell in love with the Acts of The Apostles onwards and with that a love of our theology. There is nothing further to be revealed.

In a certain remote sense, we are still 'writing' the 'new testament' but now quite historically as well as further understandings and insights into Scripture, since God has revealed all in Scripture. The Acts of The Apostles onwards are insights and understandings of Scripture - i.e. theology, as well as stories of the early foundations of The Church.

Revelations literally scared the absolute wits out of me until I read a book by Father Michael Fallon in my forties "The Apocalypse. A revelation that history is Graced" : http://books.google....AAJ&redir_esc=y This book was of immense value in my previous suburb where cult type religions were preaching that the return of Jesus was now immanent with fundamentalist type interpretations reThe Book of Revelations and influencing young people especially and with great fear - fear of God, fear of punishment, with Jesus as a fierce and fearful judge. I have had occasion to lend it out once in the suburb in which I am now living and to a woman who was being visited by a cult type religion and with the type of message that seems to go with modern day cult thinking.

Another excellent book and the first I ever read as a commentary on Scripture is Thomas Merton's "On Opening The Bible" http://www.amazon.co...n/dp/0814604080 (this was written long before Thomas Merton developed questionable thoughts and concepts and the book's history is here http://www.deaconsil...roduct1281.html I came across it in a dusty corner of our dusty and rather disorganized Catholic Lending Library probably in my mid teens. Merton had been an advisor to VaticanII) Funny story there. I had borrrowed a few books and forgotten to return one. Father rings up one day and asks me to return the book or he would have to (jokingly) 'cut off my hands'. "Oh Father, I have a statue of Jesus with no hands" (which I did and another story entirely). "Ahhhh" says Father "So He has been stealing books too, has He?"

A much more difficult read, but worth it is "The Men and Message of The Old Testament": http://www.amazon.co...t/dp/0814603483

Father Michael Fallon is a Missionary of The Sacred Heart and a South Australian scipture scholar of some renown. He has written a commentary on the four Gospels and on a few other books of The Bible. He has put out CD's and there are texts of lectures and addresses, homilies etc. on his new website. www.mbfallon.com
I did have all four of his commentaries on The Gospels, made the mistake of lending them out without recording to whom, and two were never returned before I shifted residence almost three years ago now and Catholic books can be quite expensive. Father Michael's books (the ones I have read) are very easy to understand.
E&OE

Edited by BarbaraTherese, 14 July 2012 - 10:23 PM.