Some doubt is in order here; at issue is not only the  cohesiveness of
the New Testament story, but  the cohesiveness of the two  testaments
and, even if not as crucial, the Apocrypha. And making sense of  things
given mistakes scattered all over the place. However, this is a  hopeful 
sign.
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
Christian Post
 
 
 
Theological Seminary Graduates Aim to Close Gap in Biblical  Understanding
 
By _Alex  Murashko_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/alex-murashko/) 
July 25, 2013|7:51 am
Four Dallas Theological Seminary graduates who formed a non-profit 
publishing  group aimed at closing the ever-widening gap in biblical 
understanding 
between  scholars and laymen, recently released their fourth installment in a 
series of  Bible studies through the 66 books of the Bible. The publishers 
say that  Philippians: Displaying God in Godless Times encourages Christians 
 to do what they were called on to do during Biblical times – live out 
their  faith in a primarily secular society. 
"The idea of 'Displaying God in Godless Times' is this idea of 
citizenship,"  Rhome van Dyck, one of Sacra Script Ministries' founders and who 
co-wrote 
 Philippians, told The Christian Post. "As Christians, you are supposed  to 
live out in front of a secular culture and so for the Philippians it was 
the  Roman culture that was very secular and very destructive, much like times 
today.  It's not a unique thing for the secular culture to press down on  
Christians." 
Van Dyck added, "It's about living out your faith, not being a secret  
Christian, not being someone who is arrogant or pushy, but living it out in  
front of them in Christian character. That is really the emphasis in  
Philippians." 
Sacra Script Ministries – derived from the Latin phrase for sacred 
Scripture  – began addressing grave concerns five years ago about the state of 
the 
church  and the lack of knowledge that many professing Christians have about 
their  faith, Scripture, and the God they worship. 
The publishers point out that 60 percent of Americans can't name even five 
of  the Ten Commandments, according to data from a recent Barna Research 
Group  study. "No wonder people break the Ten Commandments all the time. They 
don't  know what they are," said George Barna. 
"We realized that many people did not have a grasp of Scripture and that  
there were very few materials available to understand individual passages 
within  the overall story of Scripture," said van Dyck, who holds a Th.M. in 
Historical  Theology. 
"Unlike Bible studies designed to push the Bible forward into today's  
context, our mission is to transport students of the Bible back to the culture  
and time period of the Bible, by illuminating the original meaning and  
connecting the central message of the person and work of Christ," van Dyck 
said. 
 "We studied the Scriptures to determine how God teaches us and how we 
learn best  from Him. Jesus taught using objects, humor, and word-play that 
shook things up  for His students. It is our desire to pattern our methodology 
after Him." 
Van Dyke said that although many people, especially those who have been  
churchgoers for quite some time, "know pieces of Scripture," they do not 
really  know "how it all fits together into one cohesive story." 
Problems arise when people try to apply only the parts of the Bible they 
know  to solving problems in their lives, he said. 
"We go through all these segments and what we've missed is that these 
stories  in Scriptures, these segments, these passages, all are connected to 
showing us  that our Savior is sufficient to see us through the difficulties 
and 
challenges  of life," van Dyke said. "So what we end up lacking is an 
actual relationship  with Jesus, an actual knowledge of Him." 
He explains, "We've spent a lot of time taking passages and making 
principles  and steps and applications for us, and some of that is okay, but 
primarily the  message of Scripture is you are fallen and God is providing us a 
Savior who is  sufficient and able to save." 
"What we found is that a lot of people know pieces of Scripture, especially 
 if they've been around church a long time, but they don't really know how 
it all  fits together into one cohesive story." 
Sacra Script's team includes seminary-trained contributors with various  
specialties, including biblical narrative analysis, educational methodology,  
biblical and ecclesiastical history, technology, and professional media  
production. 
With Dallas Seminary as a common thread, each member comes from a different 
 country and cultural background, including Rhome van Dyck of Vancouver, 
British  Columbia and throughout parts of Canada; Carlos Astorga of Mexico 
City and  Monterrey, Mexico; Rhome's wife Vanessa van Dyck of Houston, Texas; 
and Jonathan  Murphy of Belfast, Northern Ireland. 
Publishers say that many different tools are included in the beautifully  
bound books to help readers understand God's Word. Field Notes throughout the 
 book contain detailed written explanations, outlines, word studies, 
pictures,  notes, illustrations, maps and timelines in order to capture the 
meaning. 
Sacra Script Ministries desires to "address the biblical needs of the 
Church  by equipping the Body of Christ with excellent Bible studies that 
convert 
 content into meaning. For more information visit: 
http://www.sacrascript.org/.

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