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Which Books of the Bible Do I Start First?
shadytyrone asked:
For someone brand new to the faith, what is a good chapter of the Bible to start reading?
Hey dear friend, great question. I think it really depends on your learning style, but I can recommend a few ideas:
- The Book of John is almost always the best place to start. It has a ton of theology and shows specifically what Jesus came to do on the earth. It elaborates on seven miracles by Jesus in ascending order of power (starting with turning water into wine, ending with Jesus raising someone from the dead), and suddenly Jesus gets a hit contract on him because heās considered too powerful. Jesus gives a few sermons before he dies, sort of like ālast words,ā and thereās a detailed account of Jesusās activity after he jumps out of the grave. I also like the Book of Mark, as itās the āaction gospelā and moves very quickly through Jesusās life, like a Robert Ludlum novel.
- Paulās letters are extremely important. I would start with possibly Philippians (about joy and unity, written from one of Paulās prison bids), and then Ephesians (about how Jesus saves us when we could not save ourselves). You might find stuff that sounds archaic or weird (some of his views on women or slaves will initially sound off-putting), but thereās a broader context for those statements, especially since heās writing in the first century. Iād recommend also reading Colossians and Galatians, then Romans, which was supposed to be his final will and explanation of Christianity.
- Proverbs is all wisdom. Itās timeless. It has 31 chapters and could be done a chapter a day to fill out a month. Some of the Proverbs will reach right through your lungs and shake you up.
- Psalms is a lengthy book, but it contains the spectrum of every single possible human emotion, with every kind of interaction with God. The magnum opus of Psalms is chapter 119, which is the longest book of the Bible and seems intimidating, but itās wonderful and worth the effort.
- The story of David is incredible (1 and 2 Samuel and the first two chapters of 1 Kings). Iāve taught on David more than any other Old Testament character. Heās endlessly fascinating and his life is the stuff of glorious, epic, Game-of-Thrones-level narrative. David goes from unknown nobody to overnight celebrity to completely scumbag royalty to a redeemed sickly old man. Itās a breathtaking ride, both maddening and heartbreaking. Iām certain that David suffered from depression, anxiety, and PTSD, and he doubted God constantly. I guess I get mad at David while reading him because I see him in me, and I so badly want David to be redeemed, as if I would be redeemed, too.
- You could always start from the beginning at Genesis. The first book of the Bible, to be truthful, is pretty difficult to finish. There are alarming parts that wonāt mesh with our twenty-first century sensibilities, like genocide and incest and sexual abuse and polygamy and selling kids into slavery. But Genesis is exactly that very story: about the frustrating efforts of a selfish humanity trying to be their own god and exploiting people for the approval that they once had in Him. Itās that simple (and complicated). Over and over, Genesis shows how depraved and awful we can really be, especially when we have zero unchecked authority. When you see it that way, you can see how patient that God really was when you know what He was dealing with. It seems Heās a little āwrath-crazyā in the Old Testament, but in my opinion, God was holding back way more than He should have. Genesis is essentially a case study of humanityās very worst versus Godās very best.
- For a bit of āadvanced reading,ā try the Book of James. It has 54 imperative commands within 108 verses, and is essentially all marching orders once you become a Christian. This will grab you by the guts and wonāt let go. For more of that, also hit up 1 John, another relentless book of truth and conviction.
- I have to give a shout-out to Ruth and Hosea. Ruth is the sweetest love story in the Bible, almost a romantic comedy, and Hosea is the most tragic, much more of a grand opera. Both are equally important in conveying Godās heart in the tides of human nature, and how much we really need a true love in the fluctuating ricochet of life.
ā J.S.
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He wore my crown of thorns and bore the cross for my sins. He sets me free.
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The Anatomical And Physiological Details Of Death By Crucifixion: By Dr. C. Truman Davis A Physician Analyzes the Crucifixion. From New Wine Magazine, April 1982. Originally published in Arizona Medicine, March 1965, Arizona Medical Association. Crucifixion was invented by the Persians in 300 BC, and perfected by the Romans in 100 BC. 1,It is the most painful death ever invented by man and is where we get our term āexcruciating.ā 2,It was reserved primarily for the most vicious of male criminals. Jesus refused the anaesthetic wine which was offered to Him by the Roman soldiers because of His promise in Matthew 26: 29, āBut I say to you, I will not drink of this fruit of the vine from now on until that day when I drink it new with you in My Fatherās kingdom.ā 3,Jesus was stripped naked and His clothing divided by the Roman guards. This was in fulfilment of Psalm 22:18, āThey divide My garments among them, and for My clothing they cast lots.ā 4,The Crucifixion of Jesus guaranteed a horrific, slow, painful death. Having been nailed the Cross, Jesus now had an impossible anatomical position to maintain. 5,Jesusā knees were flexed at about 45 degrees, and He was forced to bear His weight with the muscles of His thigh, which is not an anatomical position which is possible to maintain for more than a few minutes without severe cramp in the muscles of the thigh and calf. 6,Jesusā weight was borne on His feet, with nails driven through them. As the strength of the muscles of Jesusā lower limbs tired, the weight of His body had to be transferred to His wrists, His arms, and His shoulders. 7,Within a few minutes of being placed on the Cross, Jesusā shoulders were dislocated. Minutes later Jesusā elbows and wrists became dislocated. 8,The result of these upper limb dislocations is that His arms were 9 inches longer than normal, as clearly shown on the Shroud. 9,In addition prophecy was fulfilled in Psalm 22:14, āI am poured out like water, and all My bones are out of joint.ā 10,After Jesusā wrists, elbows, and shoulders were dislocated, the weight of His body on his upper limbs caused traction forces on the Pectoralis Major muscles of His chest wall. 11,These traction forces caused His rib cage to be pulled upwards and outwards, in a most unnatural state. His chest wall was permanently in a position of maximal respiratory inspiration. In order to exhale, Jesus was physiologically required to force His body. 12,In order to breathe out, Jesus had to push down on the nails in His feet to raise His body, and allow His rib cage to move downwards and inwards to expire air from His lungs. 13,His lungs were in a resting position of constant maximum inspiration. Crucifixion is a medical catastrophe. 14,The problem was that Jesus could not easily push down on the nails in His feet because the muscles of His legs, bent at 45 degrees, were extremely fatigued, in severe cramp, and in an anatomically compromised position. 15,Unlike all Hollywood movies about the Crucifixion, the victim was extremely active. The crucified victim was physiologically forced to move up and down the cross, a distance of about 12 inches, in order to breathe. 16,The process of respiration caused excruciating pain, mixed with the absolute terror of asphyxiation. 17,As the six hours of the Crucifixion wore on, Jesus was less and less able to bear His weight on His legs, as His thigh and calf muscles became increasingly exhausted. There was increasing dislocation of His wrists, elbows and shoulders, and further elevation of His chest wall, making His breathing more and more difficult Within minutes of crucifixion Jesus became severely dyspnoeic (short of breath). 18,His movements up and down the Cross to breathe caused excruciating pain in His wrist, His feet, and His dislocated elbows and shoulders. 19,The movements became less frequent as Jesus became increasingly exhausted, but the terror of imminent death by asphyxiation forced Him to continue in His efforts to breathe. 20,Jesusā lower limb muscles developed excruciating cramp from the effort of pushing down on His legs, to raise His body, so that He could breathe out, in their anatomically compromised position. 21,The pain from His two shattered median nerves in His wrists exploded with every movement. 22,Jesus was covered in blood and sweat. 23,The blood was a result of the Scourging that nearly killed Him, and the sweat as a result of His violent involuntary attempts to effort to expire air from His lungs. Throughout all this He was completely naked, and the leaders of the Jews, the crowds, and the thieves on both sides of Him were jeering, swearing and laughing at Him. In addition, Jesusā own mother was watching. 24,Physiologically, Jesusā body was undergoing a series of catastrophic and terminal events. 25,Because Jesus could not maintain adequate ventilation of His lungs, He was now in a state of hypoventilation (inadequate ventilation). 26,His blood oxygen level began to fall, and He developed Hypoxia (low blood oxygen). In addition, because of His restricted respiratory movements, His blood carbon dioxide (CO2) level began to rise, a condition known as Hypercapnia. 27,This rising CO2 level stimulated His heart to beat faster in order to increase the delivery of oxygen, and the removal of CO2 28,The Respiratory Centre in Jesusā brain sent urgent messages to his lungs to breathe faster, and Jesus began to pant. 29,Jesusā physiological reflexes demanded that He took deeper breaths, and He involuntarily moved up and down the Cross much faster, despite the excruciating pain. The agonising movements spontaneously started several times a minute, to the delight of the crowd who jeered Him, the Roman soldiers, and the Sanhedrin. 30,However, due to the nailing of Jesus to the Cross and His increasing exhaustion, He was unable to provide more oxygen to His oxygen starved body. 31,The twin forces of Hypoxia (too little oxygen) and Hypercapnia (too much CO2) caused His heart to beat faster and faster, and Jesus developed Tachycardia. 32,Jesusā heart beat faster and faster, and His pulse rate was probably about 220 beats/ minute, the maximum normally sustainable. 33,Jesus had drunk nothing for 15 hours, since 6Ā pm the previous evening. Jesus had endured a scourging which nearly killed Him. 34,He was bleeding from all over His body following the Scourging, the crown of thorns, the nails in His wrists and feet, and the lacerations following His beatings and falls. 35,Jesus was already very dehydrated, and His blood pressure fell alarmingly. 36,His blood pressure was probably about 80/50. 37,He was in First Degree Shock, with Hypovolaemia (low blood volume), Tachycardia (excessively fast Heart Rate), Tachypnoea (excessively fast Respiratory Rate), and Hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating). 38,By about noon Jesusā heart probably began to fail. 39,Jesusā lungs probably began to fill up with Pulmonary Oedema. 40,This only served to exacerbate His breathing, which was already severely compromised. 41,Jesus was in Heart Failure and Respiratory Failure. 42,Jesus said, āI thirstā because His body was crying out for fluids. 43,Jesus was in desperate need of an intravenous infusion of blood and plasma to save His life 44,Jesus could not breathe properly and was slowly suffocating to death. 45,At this stage Jesus probably developed a Haemopericardium. 46,Plasma and blood gathered in the space around His heart, called the Pericardium. 47,This fluid around His heart caused Cardiac Tamponade (fluid around His heart, which prevented Jesusā heart from beating properly). 48,Because of the increasing physiological demands on Jesusā heart, and the advanced state of Haemopericardium, Jesus probably eventually sustained Cardiac Rupture. His heart literally burst. This was probably the cause of His death. 49,To slow the process of death the soldiers put a small wooden seat on the Cross, which would allow Jesus the āprivilegeā of bearing His weight on his sacrum. 50,The effect of this was that it could take up to nine days to die on a Cross. 51,When the Romans wanted to expedite death they would simply break the legs of the victim, causing the victim to suffocate in a matter of minutes. This was called Crucifragrum. 52,At three oāclock in the afternoon Jesus said, āTetelastai,ā meaning, āIt is finished.ā At that moment, He gave up His Spirit, and He died. 53,When the soldiers came to Jesus to break His legs, He was already dead. Not a bone of His body was broken, in fulfilment of prophecy (above). 54,Jesus died after six hours of the most excruciating and terrifying torture ever invented. 55,Jesus died so that ordinary people like you and me could go to Heaven. All He Asks You is to Love Him, Your Lord, Your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mindā!!
Wow I cried reading this. Read it slowly. This isnāt for the faint of heart. Iāve been hearing about the crucifixion all my life, but I never really knew all of the pain Jesus was in. Wow. This is really powerful.
My Lord Jesus, I did not deserve for You to undergo this horrific torture in my place. Ā There is nothing Iāve done, nothing I could ever do do earn You taking my place.
But You did it because You love me. Ā Thatās all. Ā Thatās the only reason. Ā You love me, a sinner, so that I might spend eternity with You in Heaven.
Humbly, I thank You, Lord.
All that Christ has done; never say thank-you enough #amazinggrace
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Is "Give it to God" Biblical Advice?
I am very tired. I am tired of worrying about my career. I am tired of worrying about my marriage and children. I am tired of worrying about the future, the bills, and my bank account. I am tired of worrying about my worrying, dealing with anxiety, the drain of being so introverted that sometimes just being around my own family too long, kills me. I am in one of those seasons where I am just waiting for the next chapter, and I am tired of waiting, tired of seeking, and tired ofā¦well, being tired.
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā For the Christian, it is very easy to feel guilty about having worries. Doesnāt the Bible and the Church tell us to give it over to God? Arenāt we supposed to trust in Him? But let me ask you, in a season of true stress, grief and emotional turmoil, are these Sunday School answers and Christian Hallmark saying really enough to get you through the day? When youāre soul aches, can God just wash away the sorrow and grief? Yesā¦but no.
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Jesus, the author and perfector of our faith, experienced loss. He wept at the death of His friend Lazarus. He was stressed to the point of sweating blood before His crucifixion. Are we going to really accuse Jesus of not fully trusting the Father, who we believe as Christians, He was in perfect relationship? Of course not!
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā For many, myself included, we get worries, stresses, and anxieties. And the problem is not in feeling these raw emotions (in fact, God, in His creation, designed us to feel them to help us survive) but holding on to them for too long. We tend to think that God has too much on His plate to ever care about our life, the electric bill or the student loan. How could God, who is the Lord of the Universe, ever care about who I marry or where I get a job? But thatās the great thing about our omnipotent Lord. Nothing is too big for Him to handle and thus no problem we have is too small for Him to care about.
Matthew 10:29-31 - Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them will fall to the ground outside your Fatherās care. And even the very hairs of your head are all numbered. So donāt be afraid; you are worth more than many sparrows.
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā You never hear the birds complain. Maybe its because Iām not Dr. Doolittle, but they seem to have āfaithā in where they will build their nest or find their next meal. Jesus points out that even birds, which have such little value, are taken care of by God. Given housing in the trees and food from the ground. Christ reminds us that we are so much more valuable to the Father than birds and not even the hairs on our head are too insignificant for Him to take notice of.
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā A bird will panic and tweet if you threaten in. If its eggs go missing it will make all sorts of noises and attack enemies. But at the end of the bad times, the animals move on. And so it should be for us. Not because we āget over itā but because pass it onto to someone whose shoulders are broad enough to handle it.
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā In one of Jesus most well known sayings, He said, āCome to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.ā We often think that this means that Jesus will just make all of our problems go away. But rest does not always come from having every issue resolved. It can come from knowing there is someone who has your back. Someone who loves you and will work with you to get through it. It can come from knowing that there is a master plan, executed on the cross, and will come to completion in the final days when we join Christ in Heaven and are no longer tired, because we have rest.Ā