Full description not available
C**B
Good, but very basic.
I am preparing a church-level class on Bible study, and I am in the midst of the searching for an appropriate text. It was with great hope that I approached Mayhue's appropriately named brief piece on Bible study. Mayhue has a good reputation, according to friends of mine who have attended Masters.First things first. This is a good book, maybe a very good book. Mayhue has written it at a level appropriate for a general church audience. There's no off-putting jargon or terminology, it's written at a level accessible to almost any reader, it's not too voluminous, and there are good questions at the end of each chapter. This is very likely the text I'm going to pick. While my review below may sound rather critical, I have a feeling that this book will wind up being my "best-in-class" choice.Mayhue loosely structures the book around the 2 Timothy 2:15 admonition to "cut it straight." Part One, Making Straight Cuts, contains 5 chapters covering topics such as studying the Bible for God's approval, an explanation of how the Bible came to be, useful tools for Bible study, and then two chapters on how to study the Bible. Boiled down to bullet points, Mayhue's steps for Bible study are: affirmation, preparation, observation, investigation, interpretation, correlation (tracing a theme through Scripture), personalization, appropriation, proclamation.The tools for Bible study are dated, and not commensurate with the level of the book. If a student is going to get Greek helps, for example, I would also assume that he's going to choose a more advanced book on Bible study. More than likely, he's going to use web-based resources.One of the reasons I am just a little lukewarm about this text is because it is too homiletical for my tastes (meaning forced, so that the points have "good homiletical structure" at the expense of plain meaning), and it seems a little lightweight in the observation department. By way of example of the aforementioned two characteristics, I am told to observe singularly, observe carefully, observe thoroughly, observe systematically, observe intimately. Mayhue does an excellent job of fleshing out what he means under each point, but you won't know what he means intuitively from the title of the point. This part of the book is too brief: most of the errors of the average Bible reader that I encounter start with an inadequate observation of text and context. I would have liked a little more under this heading.In Part Two, Avoiding Crooked Cuts, Mayhue covers a number of errors and mistakes made by readers (and scholars) of the text. His examples are quite good, but he seems to have invented his own category names for each error, which won't be helpful if a student using this text then moves on to a more advanced one. This section also carries the distinct feeling of a guy who's grinding a bit of a theological axe in some of his identification of errors: you can feel the tension between Reformed and Dispensational theology (which makes sense, as it is a tension primarily located in one's hermeneutics).Part Three is a short piece on Living Out Your Cuts. Mayhue encourages the Bible student to live consistently with the results of his study. It's a great admonition.Strengths of the book: its accessibility, its practicality, its illustrations, its questions at the end of each chapter.Weaknesses of the book: a little light on observation and correlation, and Part 2, on fallacies, seems a bit uneven.Overall recommendation: this book is great for a believer who is beginning to understand that there is more to Bible reading than simply letting the book flop open at any uncertain place. It's a good book for a believer who wants to sharpen their skills in understanding Scripture. It's a great step up into the rewarding world of Bible study.
G**N
Responding to God's Revelation with Honesty and Objectivity
This is a very clear, concise, and objective treatment of the duty and privilege of Bible study from one of the modern masters of that discipline. Dr. Mayhue's essential message is that the one true and living God has, indeed, spoken to His creatures in an inerrant, trustworthy, and authoritative written revelation--the Bible. Because it is God's book, it demands 2 things: 1 - A careful, reverent approach to studying it with a view to discovering what exactly God has said in the text, rather than forcing our own ideas and opinions upon the words of Scripture; 2 - A humble, submissive belief of what God has said--not just a cold intellectual assent, but an unswerving trust in the faithfulness of the Author and the words of the Bible, resulting in a dedicated obedience and application of the truth of Scripture to every area of life. Dr. Mayhue describes the methods and tools for studying the Bible with integrity, and he also provides helpful warnings of some common pitfalls and illegitimate approaches to handling divine revaltion. This subject is of utmost importance, because on Judgment Day every single one of us will give account to God for the way we responded to His Bible, and the consequences of that evaluation will be either an eternal blessing, or an eternal curse.
W**S
Adequate guide for Bible study
Mayhue has written a very accessible book for learning how to do Bible study. While it is not the best on the subject I have read, it will certainly get new Christians, or older Christians who still do not do regular Bible study, of to a good start.
A**R
The meaning of HOW TO
This book is worth buying. However, it seems the title should be.... HOW NOT TO study the Bible.If you want a HOW TO hermeneutical guide then buy BIBLICAL THEOLOGY IN THE LIFE OF THE CHURCH by Michael Lawrence. This is well worth more than you will pay for it.
A**R
Helpful
Helpful
M**N
Simple clear easy reading and the content is self explanatory
Simple clear easy reading and the content is self explanatory. We need more books written like this on the proper way to go about understanding and interpreting the bible as we read and study it.
J**R
YOUR STUDY WILL NOT BE THE SAME!
WOW! What a great buy! You will not regret buying this book. God truly used Mayhue when he gave him the idea to write this book. Every Christian should own a copy!
G**V
Excellent!
If you don't know how to interpret the Bible this resource will really help you out. There are a lot of "How to's" out there when it comes to learning how to interpret the bible, but you won't go wrong with this one.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
2 weeks ago