Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Bible blog of award-winning bestselling Christian author, Stephen M. Miller. for Wednesday, 21 January 2015 "One last Christmas gift"

Bible blog of award-winning bestselling
Christian author, Stephen M. Miller
.

One last Christmas gift

Becca Eck singing Winter Snow
FOR THOSE WHO MISS CHRISTMAS. If you don’t like this song, Winter Snow, please don’t tell me. You’ll understand why by and by.
FIRST OF ALL, I’M SORRY.
Everyone who subscribes to my free blog articles missed Monday’s article. I wrote it. Honest I did. I just didn’t schedule it for pickup on time.
Here’s the link to the article, which I think you might enjoy if you like studying the Bible:
How I pick my Bible translations

After the apology

Now for today’s feature, if I scheduled it right. I’m going to link you to a YouTube song.
You know those times when a song wraps you up and squeezes like a hug from God?
It happens to me often at my church; thank you Director of Worship Arts and the Holy Spirit, listed in alphabetical order.
One song I’d like you to hear for yourself was performed in my church on the Sundaybefore Christmas. It was a song I had never heard before, Winter Snow.
I loved it so much that I asked the church’s technical producer if I could get a copy of the recording he made.
From the copy he gave me I created a video version of the song, a process that’s a bit intimidating because I’m a rookie at video and I’m working well outside my area of expertise. Besides, the technical producer teaches classes on this topic. And I haven’t taken any of his classes yet. So forgive my technical failings and know that this effort is from a soul hugged.
I think this particular song is a good one not only for Christmas or for those missing the warmth of the Christmas holidays. It can work nicely, too, as a song introducing Easter. (Don’t miss the last scene.)
One more thing, the lead singer is my daughter.
Here’s Becca Eck singing Winter Snow:
P.S. What’s the point of having a blog if you can’t use it once in a while to say something nice about your own kid?
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How I pick my Bible translations 

by 
Two young ladies talking on a bench outside.





TALK TO ME. When I read a Bible, I want to like the voice I hear. I might not necessarily like what I hear the voice saying. But I want the voice to sound familiar – like the voices of the people in my life. Photo by Jan Fidler/flickr.
I QUOTE LOTS OF BIBLE TRANSLATIONS in my books.
Skeptics among my friends have asked why. Some wonder if I look around until I find a Bible translation that says what I wanted it to say.
That is not the way it works. My baseline education is as a journalist. Not the kind you see on TV that give you a little bit of information and then roll into a rant of what they believe about how good something is or how bad something is.
A good journalist simply wants to know what is. They want the truth.
When I am writing a paragraph and I want to insert something from the Bible, I generally call upBibleGateway.com on my computer. It has a bunch of Bible translations available to compare side-by-side. On one screen I am able to put up five different versions of the Bible.
I’m going to do that right now.
I’ll tell you right up front that the Bible translation I use as my default version – my preferred version – is the New Living Translation. It seems to be as accurate as any of the new, easy-reading translations. And as a general rule, I like the sound of its voice.
Just for fun, I am going to open up all five columns, each with a different Bible translation. When I am working on a book the following are the five I use most often. That’s because I think these versions sound like the people I hear in my life.
Let’s take a look at the first beatitude of Jesus. It’s from Matthew 5:3. See which version sounds most like the way the people in your life talk.
“God blesses those who are poor and realize their need for him, for the Kingdom of Heaven is theirs.” New Living Translation
“They are blessed who realize their spiritual poverty,
for the kingdom of heaven belongs to them.” New Century Version
“God blesses those people
who depend only on him.
They belong to the kingdom
of heaven!” Contemporary English Version
“Blessed are those who are spiritually needy.
The kingdom of heaven belongs to them.” New International Reader’s Version
“You’re blessed when you’re at the end of your rope. With less of you there is more of God and his rule.” The Message
As I’m looking at these right now, I’m not sure what the actual meaning is behind the statement of Jesus. So what I would do at this point would be to look at some of the more scholarly translations. Here are two of the most respected translations among Bible experts.
“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” New American Standard Bible
“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” New Revised Standard Version
No difference of opinion there.
What these two translations tell me is that Jesus was probably talking about spiritual poverty and not necessarily financial poverty. So in that case I would probably not go with the New Living Translation this time. It seems to imply financial poverty.
I don’t think any of the translations I’ve looked at so far ring the bell for me. So I’d keep looking for something that expresses that idea most clearly.
If I were writing a book today about the Beatitudes, I would be tempted to use this Bible translation of the verse:
“Happy are people who are hopeless, because the kingdom of heaven is theirs.” Common English Bible
It has zing. But it doesn’t express the “spiritual” theme Jesus was getting at.
So I might give it a try myself. Here’s the best I can come up with at the moment.
“When you feel spiritually bankrupt, remember this blessing:
God’s kingdom is your home.” Steve’s Bible Translation
Take a look at other Bible translations and see if you can come up with anything that expresses the idea better than any of the ones I’ve listed here.
Let me know if you do.
Have a wonderful week ahead.
____________________________

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