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Baker Publishing Group

Auteur van Apocrypha, King James Version

255+ Werken 2,870 Leden 46 Besprekingen

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Werken van Baker Publishing Group

Apocrypha, King James Version (1983) 397 exemplaren
Apocrypha (0200) 84 exemplaren
Jesus Speaks to Teens (2004) 29 exemplaren
Moments of Peace for the Morning (2006) 24 exemplaren
Moments of Peace for the Evening (2005) 22 exemplaren
Moments of Peace from the Psalms (2007) 20 exemplaren
NASB Clarion Reference Edition (2012) 17 exemplaren
GOD'S WORD Text Hardcover (2003) 13 exemplaren
KJV Transetto Text Blue Paperback (2011) 12 exemplaren
Quiet Moments Alone with God (2006) 9 exemplaren
The Book of Common Prayer (1968) 7 exemplaren
Welcome Speeches and Responses (1987) 6 exemplaren
America's Great Revivals (2020) 4 exemplaren
GOD'S WORD For Little Ones (2004) 3 exemplaren
Household Money Organizer, The (2010) 3 exemplaren
The New Combined Bible Dictionary And Concordance (1988) — Samensteller — 2 exemplaren
Gods Word Noah's Ark Bible (2003) 2 exemplaren
KJV Bible Promises for Women (2015) 1 exemplaar
GOD'S WORD for Each Day (2003) 1 exemplaar
Words to Live By 1 exemplaar
GOD'S WORD for Each Day (2003) 1 exemplaar
GW Thinline Bible (2010) 1 exemplaar

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ISBN 13: 978-1107608078
ISBN 10: 1107608074

First sentence: In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.

Start date: March 1, 2024. End date: April 7, 2024.

I love, love, love, love and adore this Bible. I do. The paper quality is excellent--absolutely fabulous. Is it as good as India paper???? I haven't read this Cameo side by side with a Cameo with India paper. I do have a few Bibles printed on India paper--I love them all. The paper of this Cameo Reference Bible is supplied by Papeteries du Leman, Thonon-les-Bains France. It is printed in the Netherlands by Royal Jongbloed. Cambridge is the oldest Bible publisher; they have been printing Bibles in English since 1591.

Petit Medieval Clarendon 1159 is the font type and the size is 8 point. It is SMALL, of course, but it is also LIGHT. It is compact in size. It is SO easy to hold and position that the small size is not difficult. Yes, I have tricky vision. Very tricksy. I would never claim that I could easily read a Bible if I struggled with it.

Double-column. Red-letter. It was a pleasant enough red letter. I've seen better. I've seen worse. I've seen a lot worse. I love the layout of this one.

There is separate pagination (page count) for the Old Testament, the Apocrypha, and the New Testament.

The apocrypha includes: 1 Esdras, 2 Esdras, Tobit, Judith, Rest of Esther, Wisdom of Solomon, Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, Song of Three Holy Children, History of Susanna, History of Bel and the Dragon, Prayer of Manasses, 1 Maccabees, 2 Maccabees.

This was my first time reading the apocrypha in the King James Version. I have read Apocryphal books in the Revised Standard Version and the New Revised Standard Version. I'm not sure if they are the exact same books. I am by no means an "expert" when it comes to the Apocrypha. I've read it two to three times. I know one of those was a Catholic edition so that the books may have been different.

My system that I used for most of this project was an adapted Bible in 90 days. I used the Bible Reading Plan Generator, selected my books, and checked that I wanted readings from the Old Testament and the New Testament each "day." I usually read two "days" per day. One in the morning devotions. One in the afternoon/evening devotions. Some days I went ahead and read an extra day. Towards the end, I was doubling and tripling up on readings. I could see the finish line in sight. Now, that being said--speed was not a motivator. My goal was not to rush through and say I did it. I absolutely LOVE love love reading the Bible. I do tend to pick up speed when I only have a few books left. But I think this is natural--for me--and not necessarily a warning sign that my reasons are all wrong.
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blbooks | 3 andere besprekingen | Apr 9, 2024 |
After going into the Bible a few years back as a scofflaw atheist and coming out as someone with a healthy respect for the philosophy and stories of the Bible, particularly when rendered in that gorgeous King James prose, I opened the Apocrypha with an open mind. These are the ugly stepchildren of the Biblical corpus; texts that, for one reason or another, are considered non-canonical. Sometimes that is because they were meant to be read in private rather than in public service, sometimes because their authenticity was unclear, and mostly, I suspect, because in the various translations and denominations of Christianity over the millennia, they just got shuffled out of the pack.

After reading the Apocrypha, I do find myself wishing some had been expunged due to being too heretical. Because, even though it is also available in that King James prose, the book could do with some spice to it. From first to last I found the Apocrypha dull and tedious, and while some might have that impression of the canonical Bible, that was certainly not my impression of it when I finally sat down to reading it some years back. The Bible had the masterpiece that is the Book of Job, some neat origin stories in Genesis, the fiery books of Moses, eloquent philosophic rants like Jeremiah, to say nothing of the New Testament's 'Greatest Story Ever Told' and Revelation fever-dream. The Apocrypha had nothing like that, but it also didn't have much else. (And some other non-canonical books which sound interesting, like the Gnostic Gospels – particularly Thomas – and the Gospel of Judas, don't form part of the Apocrypha either.)

The Apocrypha starts off with the two books of Esdras, which are standard Old Testament fare about waging war on powerful enemies and coming through by the power of the Lord. They're interesting enough, but they don't do anything that the Books of the Kings don't do, and the Books of the Kings are far from the best stuff in the Bible. After a banal book called Tobit, there is the Book of Judith, which is the only part of the Apocrypha which threatens to actually be interesting for a moment (Judith seduces a warlord who is an enemy of the Jews, then beheads him in his bed in the night).

After that, there is a long scattergun sequence of books that are nothing very much, but at least are short (though all of the books in the Apocrypha are quite short). This is disappointing, and even a book called the Wisdom of Solomon, which should at least have a few good lines, is mostly just unreflective stuff about praising and trusting in God, lacking the nuance of many similar proverbs in, well, Proverbs.

The book ends with its two longest pieces – the two Books of the Maccabees. Like Esdras, these are banal narratives of fighting other desert tribes and trusting in God to help you smite them. It's sub-standard fare, lacking anything memorable. Ultimately, one can see why the Apocrypha is not part of the canonical Bible; there's just not much there for people to chew on, except for one or two of the more dedicated Biblical scholars. I maintain, not just due to its importance and influence but its objective quality, that the King James Bible should be on the reading list of anyone who is serious about literature. But the Apocrypha can be safely ignored.
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MikeFutcher | 2 andere besprekingen | Feb 18, 2024 |
Lovely. Really appreciate having the Apocrypha included. The text is a little small for me. But the advantage of the compact size outlays that.
 
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AnglicanAnchoress | 3 andere besprekingen | Sep 19, 2023 |
I got this just because it was unique. If you had to bug out this would take up zero room in your back pack.
 
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AnglicanAnchoress | Sep 19, 2023 |

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255
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2,870
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