Bible Review
Bible Review opens the realm of Biblical scholarship to a non-academic audience. World-renown scholars detail the latest in Biblical interpretation and why it matters. These important pieces are paired with stunning art, which makes the text come to life before your eyes. Anyone interested in the Bible should read this seminal magazine.
Greek for Bible Readers
Hebrew for Bible Readers
It is time to read a longer text; let’s try the account in Joshua 4:1–7. We will use what we have learned and also meet some new features of Hebrew in the process:
Book Notes
A Preliminary Edition of the Unpublished Dead Sea Scrolls: The Hebrew and Aramaic Texts from Cave 4, Fascicle 2
Reconstructed and Edited by B.Z. Wacholder and M.G. Abegg (Washington: Biblical Archaeology Society, 1992) 309 pp., $67.50
Bible Books
The Passion Narratives and the Roots of Anti-Judasim
First Glance
How Shifting One Letter Can Eliminate Eve’s Curse
Moving a Hebrew consonant from one word to another adjacent to it can change meaning as illustrated here with a portion of a verse from Genesis 4:7 regarding Cain’s sin. Read in the conventional way the words are as follows:
Was Eve Cursed?
What Are Pagan River Gods Doing in Scenes of Jesus’ Baptism?
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