Reading the Bible through Different Voices
Isn't it amazing how the Word of God sounds different when read by someone else? Another reader accents different words, pauses in different places, and gives a different intonation and inflection which impacts what and how we hear.
Recently, I was meeting with our board chair and two elder co-chairs for a Bible study we are doing on the book of Acts. It was nice to hear a certain passage read by a man's voice, because most of the time I hear it read by a woman's voice, my own.
Today, as I was studying the 3rd chapter of 1 Corinthians, I came across some words that I had heard a church member repeat as he was sharing his faith with a stranger. In my mind, I could recall his voice saying those words and I knew the meaning they had to him. I read on and as I read another church member's voice came to mind. I could hear the next passage as he would read and interpret it. This reminded me that there is a lot we can learn from reading the Bible together. Reading together helps us to hear things that we might miss on our own.
Who might you invite to start a Bible study together?
Recently, I was meeting with our board chair and two elder co-chairs for a Bible study we are doing on the book of Acts. It was nice to hear a certain passage read by a man's voice, because most of the time I hear it read by a woman's voice, my own.
Today, as I was studying the 3rd chapter of 1 Corinthians, I came across some words that I had heard a church member repeat as he was sharing his faith with a stranger. In my mind, I could recall his voice saying those words and I knew the meaning they had to him. I read on and as I read another church member's voice came to mind. I could hear the next passage as he would read and interpret it. This reminded me that there is a lot we can learn from reading the Bible together. Reading together helps us to hear things that we might miss on our own.
Who might you invite to start a Bible study together?
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