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I’ve already made heavy use of it and will continue to in the future. I welcome the Verse Tab as an addition to the BibleWorks program. This is easy to navigate through, as you can imagine: One other neat thing about the Verse Tab: if you click on the “Expand” button, you can get a free-floating window that shows you all the NET notes for the whole Bible. 4:11 in the BibleWorks Search column (far left column) immediately takes me to the verse that explains this requirement. The priests were supposed to dispose of these away from the sacrificial altar, but apparently were not in Malachi’s time. The NET note (see superscript number 4 and “tn” in the image above) clarifies that Yahweh is speaking of the entrails of to-be-sacrificed animals. So his response in context really ought not to be a surprise. They were not making sacrifices in the way he had commanded (and they knew it, too).
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Yahweh was dealing with a corrupt and complacent priesthood. (It’s worth reading more about that translation and its notes here.) Honestly, a verse like the one I’ve chosen to highlight above might be a bit jarring to some–although in context it makes perfect sense. Now, however, as you can see above, you can easily access both study notes and a separate analysis window for individual word analysis. But this meant that if the Analysis Window were open to an NET study note, you couldn’t also at the same time easily see morphological analysis and lexical data–it was one or the other in that window. In previous versions of BibleWorks, the NET Bible study notes were only available via the Analysis Window. Here’s the great thing about the Verse Tab. File this under: can you believe that’s in the Bible? I had somehow never noticed this verse until the other day… thou shalt not trifle with the Lord, especially if you’re a priest or pastor. Just so you can have a visual of what I’m working with, here’s a layout I’m currently using to look at the Hebrew of Malachi. Today I want to comment on and review the Verse Tab and its usefulness. I will devote a future post to the CNTTS apparatus. For the current verse under the mouse, it displays the relevant sections in resources such as the CNTTS apparatus, the NET Bible textual notes, the Tischendorf apparatus, Metzger’s Textual Commentary (requires unlock), and the ESV Study Bible (requires unlock). The Verse Tab tracks with any Bible version. Here’s how the BibleWorks site describes it: The new Use Tab is likely my favorite new feature (I posted about it in part 1 of my review). I continue to be impressed with BibleWorks 9. There’s a great accompanying website for The Jesus Storybook Bible, with sample pages, audio files from the audio version, and more. Here’s a sample page of the Bible, from Zondervan’s product page (click for larger): It could help somebody if they were crying, and if they were sad, and nothing could work… except only if a book could work, and only if someone said Jesus StoryBible Book and they could buy it. And bats might come into the house and might like the book, just in case if they come in the house. God gave them a note that said that they were going to get back to their place. God had to send them out of the garden, because they were being naughty. And then it felt like everything was going to break. And a big lie–a really, really, really, really big lie–came into the world. This story is about a snake, and the two people that God told them not to eat the food on that tree… and they did. For the purposes of this review, he focuses on “The terrible lie: Adam and Eve lose everything, from Genesis 3.” (Cool thing: the author of the book he reviewed blogged about it here.) As before, I did the typing, but the words below are all his. Friend and fellow blogger Robbie and his wife gave us this sweet gift when our now four-year-old was born.įollowing on the heels of his first book review, my four-year-old here reviews The Jesus Storybook Bible.
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A long-time family favorite has been The Jesus Storybook Bible (subtitle: Every Story Whispers His Name ).