Some Notes on Job

Overview:  Here’s a bare-bones outline of the book:  It begins with a quick sketch of Job and his idyllic life as a good and very blessed man, with a big happy family and great wealth.  In the next scene, God is meeting with his angels, and God brings up to Satan (!) the subject of … [Read more…]

Some Notes on Ecclesiastes

Three of the Wisdom books — Ecclesiastes, Job, and Psalms — share a common theme:  It’s permissible, even expected, that we should kvetch to God about the hardships we face, but this complaining and questioning should be accompanied by faith and trust and a recognition that God knows what He is doing, so that the … [Read more…]

G.K. Chesterton, “Manalive”

I read this 1912 novel after reading Michael Dirda’s somewhat tardy but glowing review of it 106 years later in the March 29 Washington Post (“G.K. Chesterton, our guardian angel of foolery and faith”).  Dirda noted that April Fool’s Day and Easter fell on the same day this year, making it appropriate to write about Chesterton, … [Read more…]

Reading the Gospels

Happy Easter!  He is risen! Since I’m writing something about every other book of the New Testament, it would be odd to skip the Gospels.  On the other hand, one always worries that it is presumptuous at best to try to boil down God’s word, and that is especially so with the Gospels.  What’s more, … [Read more…]

Acts, Act by Act

Except for the Creation narrative in Genesis and the End Times discussion in Revelation, no book of the Bible can match the historical and geographical sweep of Acts.  It stretches from Spain to Arabia over a period of thirty to forty years, telling the story of the early days of the spread of Christianity.  And … [Read more…]

The Dozen Things We Pray in the Lord’s Prayer

Here’s what we’re saying when we pray the Lord’s Prayer: Our Father  — We acknowledge God:  His existence, power, benevolence and love (and our love for Him), and universality.  On the last point, note that throughout this prayer the first person plural is used — our, we, us — underscoring not only the universality of God … [Read more…]

Lessons from Revelation

That is, lessons from the book of Revelation.  The book is divided into two parts:  The first and shorter is the text of letters that John sends to seven churches in Asia Minor, and the second and longer is John’s apocalyptic vision of the end times. The church letters are report cards, telling each church … [Read more…]

Lessons and a Few Notes from Hebrews

While the authorship of some other books in the New Testament is sometimes disputed, the book of Hebrews is unique in that there is today apparently no traditionalist view on who wrote it, and as best I can tell no majority view either.  The original King James Version, and I believe older Catholic Bibles, labeled … [Read more…]

Lessons and Notes from Romans

Romans and Hebrews are the two most theological epistles.  One reason this is not surprising is that Romans is the only letter of Paul’s that is not tied in with running a church and/or dealing with particular congregants.  What follows is definitely not an in-depth discussion of Paul’s theology, but an outline with discussion that … [Read more…]