- Joined
- Aug 4, 2014
I been reading a book called House Rules. Been a interesting read, through I sightly annoyed seeing the autism stereotype appearing.
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I've decided to try my hand once more at my goal of reading the Bible, having failed in my previous attempts. One of my copies of the Bible has handy little week-based reading assignments in it that, if followed exactly for the whole year, would have you read the Old Testament once and the New Testament twice. I'm planning on just picking up from the current week, meaning that I'll be reading The Proverbs this week. Here's hoping that I stick to this and don't give up.
I'm more afraid of 1st Chronicles, myself. Nine straight chapters of genealogies is not my idea of a fun time.Skip the Law books (Deuteronomy, Numbers etc). Those are the books of the Bible where reading projects go to die.
Can anyone recommend some good cosmic horror that isn't by Lovecraft?
Can anyone recommend some good cosmic horror that isn't by Lovecraft?
Well, I didn't manage to make it through all of Proverbs, but I'm not ready to give up trying. I've decided to just go on ahead to next week's reading—Matthew—and take it from there. Hopefully, I'll do better and actually get around to reading this time around.
I'm lazy enough at reading as it is, and you want me to pick up an edition with more words?You might be served by reading an annotated version. It's an edition that places each book or each chapter into its historical/theological context and could help it make sense and/or make it easier to become engrossed in. Reading the Bible end-to-end, even in my Christian days, seemed too akin to reading the dictionary end-to-end. It's better with a plan and guide, maybe something like a daily devotional book.
Can anyone recommend some good cosmic horror that isn't by Lovecraft?