For those not familiar with this series, it is a series of
essentially blank journals published by Reformation Heritage Books for the
purpose of encouraging Christians to write out their own copy of the Scriptures.
It is based on two considerations: first, that the king of Israel was required
to write out for himself a copy of the book of the Law (Deut 17:18, hence the
17:18 in the series title); second, that those who write out notes learn better
than those who merely listen or merely read.
The book gives the reader/writer a place to write out, book
by book, a copy of the Scriptures for himself. There are some sixteen volumes
of the series already in publication. As it says in the opening pages of the
book itself, the Journible (I suppose this is a conflation of journal and
Bible) “is a profoundly simple attempt to aid a person’s ability to engage the
Word of God by slowing down the process of simply reading the text.” There are
some helpful comments at the beginning of the volume to encourage and give
direction to the writer. The journal is set up for the writer to write his copy
on the right-hand page, leaving room for annotations on the left.
Granted, you don’t need a specially published journal to do
this. You can buy your own journal, or a notebook, and do the same thing. But
most good-quality journals cost more than this volume does, and most contain
fewer pages. The aim is not to produce a work of art, as in the report I linked
at the beginning of this review, but rather to own the text of Scripture in a
way that the writer has not done before.
Now most people who use this will probably intend to copy
out whatever translation of the Scriptures they currently use. However, I would
suggest considering copying out the King James Bible, if for no other reason
than to familiarize yourself with a translation that has gotten lost in the
last forty years in most of evangelicalism. The modern translations have their
place, and their us; even the “see Spot run” simple-language versions. But
there is a beauty and rhythm to the language of the King James Bible that it
would do many modern Christians good to rediscover. And it would give you
reason to write explanatory notes on the left-hand page about archaic words and
other such considerations.
2 comments:
And curiously enough 1 Samuel 17.18 is also an instruction to the king of Israel after a sort of fashion...
Benjamin,
Thanks for contributing to the blog tour.
Shaun Tabatt
Cross Focused Reviews
Post a Comment