The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Bible Story
Title: The Bible Story
Author: Newton Marshall Hall
Irving Francis Wood
Release date: June 7, 2010 [eBook #32736]
Most recently updated: January 6, 2021
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Don Kostuch
[Transcriber's notes]
Thanks to Jim and Carol Presher of Timeless Antiques in Valley
Alabama for providing access to the original texts.
This is the complete text of all six volumes of the set to
permit linking among the volumes.
"HOW TO USE THE BIBLE STORY" (the first volume),
organizes the use and access of the other five volumes.
The general index to all the volumes is at the end of
the last volume.
These links connect to the beginning of each volume:
HOW TO USE THE BIBLE STORY
VOLUME ONE: THE GOLDEN BOOK
VOLUME TWO: HERO TALES
VOLUME THREE: TALES OF OLD JUDAEA
VOLUME FOUR: LIFE OF JESUS
VOLUME FIVE: SONGS OF THE AGES
GENERAL INDEX TO ALL VOLUMES
Page numbers in this book are indicated by numbers enclosed in curly braces, e.g. {99}. They have been located where page breaks occurred in the original book.
Quotation marks are often unbalanced. This transcription copies the original text.
Colons (:) are frequently used instead of commas or semicolons.
Page number references using a variety of abbreviations have been standardized for clarity.
[End transcriber's notes]
HOW TO USE THE BIBLE STORY
THE KING-RICHARDSON COMPANY
SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS
COPYRIGHT, 1917,
BY THE KING-RICHARDSON COMPANY,
SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
FOREWORD
The five volumes of THE BIBLE STORY have served to beautify and classify the Bible and are simple and complete in themselves. They do not require explanation or enrichment. It is the desire, however, by the addition of this volume to suggest definite ways of using the work.
This book contains a series of suggestions to fit the occasion, the temperament, and the time of the user. It may be picked up often and a part of it used as opportunity offers. We believe there may be those who will wish to use all the suggestions. We are sure that all who own THE BIBLE STORY will wish to use some of them.
This volume has the following aims:--
In General:
To give a better knowledge of the Bible and thus to make reading it a delight instead of a task.
Specifically:
To show how to use the work with children and how children may use it.
To make the Bible as useful as possible in character building.
To bring out the connection of the Bible with its land.
To show the connection of the Bible with literature.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
| PAGE | |
| Key. | 10 |
| Why Read the Bible? | 11 |
| Why are Bible Readers so Few? | 12 |
| PART I | |
| THE CHILD AND THE BIBLE | |
| The Mother's Part: How Can I Use THE BIBLE STORY with My Child? | 15 |
1. What Do I Have to Know in Order to Make the Best Use of THE BIBLE STORY with My Child? |
15 |
2. How Can I Encourage My Child to Memorize Bible Verses? |
15 |
3. How Can I Help My Child to Understand God's Relation to the World? |
16 |
4. How Can I Know the Best Bible Stories to Tell to Children? |
17 |
5. How Can I Get My Child to Read the Bible? |
19 |
6. How Can I Help My Child to Understand Life in Bible Times? |
19 |
7. How Can I Get My Child to Use THE BIBLE STORY for Himself? |
20 |
8. How Can I Interest My Child in the Great Works of Art in THE BIBLE STORY? |
21 |
| Questions to Ask Little Children, for general review of all the foregoing lessons. | 26 |
PART II
CHARACTER AND LIVING
| PAGE | |
| Make the Bible Heroes your Friends. | 31 |
| Jesus' Character-Building Stories | 32 |
| Foundation Stones | 33 |
| Try Lincoln's Way | 37 |
| History and the Bible | 38 |
1. The World in Bible Times |
38 |
2. The Bible in History |
39 |
| Living with the Bible | 42 |
| Questions on the Text | 45 |
PART III
THE LAND OF THE BIBLE
| A Bird's-eye View of the Land | 97 |
| Understanding Geography by Pictures | 100 |
| Locating Bible Characters in the Land | 105 |
PART IV
THE BIBLE IN LITERATURE
| The Bible's Place in Literature | 113 |
| Questions bringing out the Bible's Literary Value | 116 |
1. The Poetry of the Bible |
116 |
2. The Oratory in the Bible | 118 |
3. Other Literary Forms Found in the Bible |
119 |
4. The Literary Value of the Books of Prophecy |
120 |
5. The Bible--an Inspiration to Writers |
121 |
| The Bible's Gift to Our Language | 125 |
PART V
THE BIBLE AND THE TEACHER
| PAGE | |
| How the Foregoing Suggestions for the Use of THE BIBLE | |
| STORY may be Employed by the Bible School Teacher | 161 |
1. In the Primary Department |
161 |
2. In the Junior, Intermediate, and Senior Departments |
162 |
PART VI
PRONOUNCING DICTIONARY
INTRODUCTION
KEY
H.T. Hero Tales.
T.J. Tales of Old Judea.
L.J. Life of Jesus.
S.A. Songs of the Ages.
INTRODUCTION
Why Read the Bible?
If Bible readers everywhere could return their answers what diverse and interesting points of view the replies would bring!
For instance, one perceives in the Bible record the worst and the best that men have always thought and felt; for him it is full of the universal motives of humanity. He has noticed, too, that in sketching often but the single act of a character, the Book brings the essential man or woman vividly out of the darkness and into the light for all time. As a student of men, we can imagine such a one replying that the Bible is "The Book of Human Nature."
Another knows that it has been the inspiration of countless writers, and that its sayings and teachings are woven by the hundreds and thousands through and through the texture of our English masterpieces. A student of books might well say that the Bible is the chief "Source-Book of Our Literature."
Still another would say, "The Bible is the beginning of many of our customs. Our common law is largely founded on its laws and many of our institutions are based upon those it sanctions." So a business man, a man of affairs, might very naturally call it, "The Foundation-Book of Christian Civilization."
For many the Bible is "The Book of Salvation," pointing the way into the presence of God.
Still others draw from it counsel and strength for those who depend upon them for guidance. "God could not be everywhere, so he made mothers." And in their hands the Bible becomes "The Book of Character."
The marvel of it is that each of these viewpoints is true. And many others are equally true. For the Bible, like the diamond, reflects its light from many facets. Which one you see depends upon where you stand, upon your point of view. How clear and strong the light for you depends upon how far you have come within the circle of its radiance.
Why are Bible Readers so Few?
Truly the harvest of Bible enlightenment is plentiful beyond measure; why then are those who reap it for themselves so few? It is because we lack time to understand. Our Bible Schools might solve the problem if only they had time, but one hour a week with the Bible is scarcely an introduction to it, never a fellowship with it. The Book of books is no shallow friend to give up all its treasures upon a superficial acquaintance. Rather it is a friend to be lived with in the home.
This book of suggestions is an invitation to you to come farther within the charmed circle of the Bible's light. Its aim is to save your time by helping you to use it to the greatest advantage. However much or little of the Bible light has been coming to you, may this book help to increase, to clarify, to beautify it. If it shall help you to bring more time, the most precious of modern possessions, to the understanding of the Bible, the most precious wisdom of the ages, its purpose will have been abundantly fulfilled.
PART I
THE CHILD AND THE BIBLE
Answering Mothers' Questions
"So great is my veneration for the Bible, that the earlier my children begin to read it the more confident will be my hopes that they will prove useful citizens to their country and respectable members of society."
--John Quincy Adams.
THE CHILD AND THE BIBLE
THE MOTHER'S PART--HOW CAN I USE THE BIBLE STORY WITH MY CHILD?
This is the most important part of the work, because it helps you to understand and use all the rest, and answers your questions in regard to the religious life of your child. These suggestions are largely for the use of "The Golden Book."
1. What Do I Have to Know in Order to Make the Best Use of THE BIBLE STORY with My Child?
You must know three things:--
That a child will not appreciate and use this work at first unless you appreciate and use it too.
That in order to appreciate and use it, you do not need to read all five volumes through at once. You may begin with any one of the suggestions here given, that pleases and interests you most, and use only what little time you may have. Little by little interest will grow and the child will be finding keen enjoyment in acquiring Bible knowledge for himself.
That even though you had time for immediate and thorough reading, the work is of such proportion that its worth cannot be grasped at once. It is by constant daily use in the home that the beauty and effectiveness of THE BIBLE STORY are revealed and the Bible made an "open book" to many a child as well as adult.
2. How Can I Encourage My Child to Memorize Bible Verses?
This is not difficult. Childhood is the time when verbal memory is most acute. The best way to encourage the memorizing of verses is {16} to make a game out of it instead of a task. Do this by using the Bible alphabet in "The Golden Book" (page 25 G.B.) and thus linking up the Bible with something familiar. Teach a verse each week and ask for daily repetition of it. After several are learned, a drill on the verses is suggested as a spur to memory. Ask what verse in the Bible begins with A? B? C? etc. For the older children there are memory verses given, one for each week in the year, in the back of each of the first four volumes. Let the child himself, so far as he can, arrange these in alphabetical order.
Memorizing is much quickened by making as many natural connections as possible, the known with the unknown. Many hymns are readily recalled by associating them with Psalms of which they are explanations. Children like to learn poetry. Give them the poems suggested below as well as the accompanying Bible passages to learn. Go over them first and let the children understand the parallelism.
| Psalm 23 ( 35 S.A.) | Hymns (309 G.B., 291 G.B.) |
| Psalm 117 (139 S.A.) | Hymn (494 S.A.) |
| Psalm 19 ( 30 S.A.) | Hymn (434 G.B.) |
| The Birth of Jesus (37 L.J.) | Hymns (405 G.B., 409 G.B.) |
These hymns are well worth memorizing, for they are among the best in our language and knowing them will be an added inducement to memorizing the Bible verses that tell the same story.
3. How Can I Help My Child to Understand God's Relation to the World?
Begin with familiar things.--This is very easily done when the child's thoughts of God are related to his knowledge of the things of home. You will find a splendid treatment of these relationships in the primer pages in "The Golden Book" (27-68). Give these lessons to a child who is learning to read. He will like them because the pages look just like his school book and he will be helped in his reading at the same time that he is learning truths which explain the Bible verse given at the bottom of each page. There is no better way of helping a young child to understand love for God, faith in God, the presence of God, and other great truths that are usually given in the abstract.
(The questions at the end of this chapter will be helpful in getting the child to express himself.)
4. How Can I Know the Best Bible Stories to Tell to Children?
Remember two things: that, as children develop, different types of stories appeal to them, and that every one of these types is found in THE BIBLE STORY. It is a fact that, while the Bible is a universal story book, many of its best lessons cannot be put in story form and are therefore left out of any collection of Bible stories. Consequently the child is missing much that he might profitably have. THE BIBLE STORY meets a great need of the times by bringing to children all the lessons of the Bible, some by means of simple treatments of interesting things and some by means of longer stories of its heroes and heroines.
Simple Good-Night Talks for Little Tots
The following paragraphs in "The Golden Book" contain the sweetest, most constructive lessons to be found in the whole Bible and are beautiful good-night talks for very young children. The questions at the end of this chapter are listed according to pages in "The Golden Book" and will help in getting the child to repeat the story.
| God Sees Me. | 81 G.B. |
| What Does God Want Me to Do? | 82 G.B. |
| What God Gives. | 85 G.B. |
| Jesus and His Friends. | 86 G.B. |
| Jesus Had no Home. | 89 G.B. |
| The People Loved Jesus. | 93 G.B. |
| The Boyhood of Jesus | 97 G.B. |
| Jesus and Sick People. | 98 G.B. |
| Talking with Our Father. | 101 G.B. |
| God is Our Father. | 105 G.B. |
| What Jesus Said about Birds and Flowers. | 106 G.B. |
| What Jesus Said about Trees. | 109 G.B. |
It will be helpful to the mother who is constantly appealed to by her children for special kinds of stories to know where to find them in THE BIBLE STORY.
Stories about Other Children
Children are fond of listening to stories about other children like themselves. THE BIBLE STORY contains many such.
| Jesus and the Little Girl. | 110 G.B. |
| The Baby Hid in a Basket. | 117 G.B. |
| The Boy Who Came when He was Called. | 132 G.B. |
| The Boy Who was Raised from the Dead. | 193 G.B. |
| The Little Captive Maid. | 205 G.B. |
Hero Stories
The favorites of all children beyond the first year or two of school are the stories of great heroes. A large part of "The Golden Book" is given up to stories of Bible heroes, and the following volume is made up of the lives of these same heroes in the words of the Bible text and is consequently more difficult. The beauty of this arrangement is that after reading the easy story in "The Golden Book" a child will want to read more, and as soon as he is able will enjoy going further with his great heroes in the volumes that contain the Bible text. He will understand seemingly difficult passages in the succeeding volumes of the set because of the substantial background formed by the simple treatments in "The Golden Book." The list of simple hero stories is here given together with the corresponding stories in the Bible text in other volumes.
| The Shepherd Boy Who Killed a Giant. | 139 G.B. |
| David and Goliath. | 386 H.T. |
| David and King Saul. | 151 G.B. |
| David an Outlaw. | 406 H.T. |
| David and Jonathan. | 156 G.B. |
| The Jealousy of Saul. | 396 H.T. |
| David and His Three Brave Soldiers. | 163 G.B. |
| A Knightly Deed. | 438 H.T. |
| David and His Son Absalom. | 167 G.B. |
| The Rebellion of Absalom. | 443 H.T. |
| The Story of a Good King. | 170 G.B. |
| Solomon's Temple. | 461 H.T. |
| Joseph and His Brethren. | 177 G.B. |
| Joseph. | 91 H.T. |
In the same way you may read the Bedtime Stories, beginning on page 245 of "The Golden Book," and then go naturally to the same stories in the Bible text itself as told in the volume "The Life of Jesus."
| The Story of the First Christmas. | 245 G.B. |
| Nativity. | 37 L.J. |
| The Story of Palm Sunday. | 251 G.B. |
| The Entry into Jerusalem. | 233 L.J. |
| How Jesus Gave His Life for the World. | 257 G.B. |
| The Crucifixion. | 281 L.J. |
| The Story of the First Easter Sunday. | 265 G.B. |
| The Resurrection. | 297 L.J. |
| {19} | |
| Who was the Neighbor? | 279 G.B. |
| The Good Samaritan. | 88 L.J. |
| The Good Shepherd. | 282 G.B. |
| The Good Shepherd and the Sheep. | 200 L.J. |
5. How Can I Get My Child to Read the Bible?
In no better way than that suggested in the two foregoing paragraphs. Begin at once with the simpler parts of "The Golden Book," proceed gradually, awakening new interest, daily if possible, by means of the Questions (page 26) and Things to Do (page 20). It will take a little time and much thought, but it is the great privilege of the mother to watch for the opportunity and lead the child by means of "The Golden Book" into the treasure house of the Bible, which, despite its wonderful interest and character-building values, has up to this time presented almost a closed door to children. As soon as the child has passed out of "The Golden Book" and found an interest in the other volumes make use of the suggestions and questions in the next chapter for the "Hero Age," and hold the interest once gained.
Very early in life little children begin to ask about Christmas, Palm Sunday, and Easter. Why not seize this opportunity and give them answers to their questions from the Bible?
6. How Can I Help My Child to Understand Life in Bible Times?
By "Seeing Palestine with THE BIBLE STORY."
Read these Stories:--
| How the People Traveled in the Lands of the Bible | 208 G.B. |
| Houses in the Lands of the Bible. | 214 G.B. |
| Children in the Lands of the Bible. | 217 G.B. |
| Jerusalem. | 218 G.B. |
| The Jordan. | 224 G.B. |
| The Dead Sea. | 226 G.B. |
| Bethlehem. | 229 G.B. |
| Palestine in the Days of the Lord Jesus. | 17 L.J. |
Answer these questions:--
(Be sure to read the story on the back of each picture.)
| What do you know about plowing in Palestine? | 50 G.B., 84 G.B. |
| How do they thresh in the lands of the Bible? | 128 G.B., 274 G.B., 440 H.T. |
| What is the town of Nazareth like to-day? | 88 G.B., 100 G.B. |
| How do they draw water in old Philistia? | 142 G.B. |
| What do you know about an Eastern shepherd and his sheep? | 146 G.B., 210 G.B., 284 G.B., 308 G.B. |
| Who said, "I am the good shepherd"? | 288 G.B. |
| Tell about winnowing in Bible lands. | 158 G.B., 162 G.B. |
| Look at the pictures on pages 294 G.B., 298 G.B., 302 G.B., 312 G.B., 368 G.B., 374 G.B., then tell what Jesus said about animals. | 304 G.B. |
| What were some of the streets like in ancient Palestine? | 356 T.J., 278 L.J., 300 S.A. |
| Name the lake on which Jesus so often sailed with his disciples. | 108 G.B., 462 T.J. |
| Why were the disciples so often to be found on the lake? | 146 L.J. |
| Tell two stories about Jesus and the Lake of Galilee. | 94 L.J., 307 L.J. |
| How did the people fish in Palestine? | 487 L.J. |
| Why is it necessary in Palestine to separate the tares from the wheat before harvest? | 22 L.J. |
| What did the army of the Midianites look like when they came to fight the children of Israel? | 318 H.T., 322 H.T. |
| Read the story. | 319 H.T. |
| How and by whom is meal ground in Palestine? | 176 S.A. |
| The extent of Solomon's kingdom was from "Dan to Beersheba"; find northern and southern points | 14 T.J. |
7. How Can I Get My Child to Use THE BIBLE STORY for Himself?
By giving him some Things to Do. It is a splendid plan to take advantage of the child's natural eagerness to look at the pictures in THE BIBLE STORY, so as to make that desire of real educational value. The following are delightful for a child to do:--
Study closely the pictures on pages 176 G.B., 196 G.B., 204 G.B., and 254 G.B. of "The Golden Book," read the interesting notes on the back of each picture, and the story on page 208 G.B. of "The Golden Book." Then tell the difference between traveling in Bible lands and in our land.
Look at the pictures of Bethlehem on pages 138 G.B. and 248 G.B. of "The Golden Book" and page 28 L.J. and read the story on the back of each. Then tell how David's home and life were different from yours. Read the story on page 229 G.B. and see what wonderful things happened in this little town.
Read the story on page 214 G.B. and look at the pictures on pages 88 G.B., 92 G.B., 188 G.B., of "The Golden Book" and 192 T.J., then compare a house in the Holy Land with your house.
Read the story on page 217 G.B. of "The Golden Book" and look at the pictures opposite and on page 172 G.B. of "The Golden Book." Then tell or write what you think are the pleasant things about living in Bible lands. Look at the picture on page 236 G.B. and tell why it was good to live there in the year 33 A.D.
In your sand pile build a tiny city of Jerusalem. You will know just how to make it after you have read the story on page 218 G.B. of "The Golden Book." Put it on a hill with valleys on three sides of it. Use stones to build the wall. (See page 216 T.J.) Put a large white stone where you think the temple stood. The picture on page 480 H.T. in "Hero Tales" will show you how the city really looked. After you have built the city and neighboring hills and valleys as well as you can, show them to your mother and father and explain all the interesting features. Tell about the path on the wall and its use; tell why the city was built on a hill; tell about the gates in the wall. (See page 215 T.J.) Explain who built the temple and tell anything else you may know about the greatest city of the Bible lands.
In the back of the volume, "The Songs of the Ages," you will find an index of illustrations and can easily turn to all the pictures of Jerusalem in these volumes and learn some interesting things.
8. How Can I Interest My Child in the Great Works of Art in THE BIBLE STORY?
The interest of children in works of art, if unguided, usually lasts only for a moment. Let some one, however, begin to talk about the picture and the child fixes eager eyes upon it and follows every word with breathless attention. "Talking about a picture is simply letting a picture talk," and many of these pictures are volumes in themselves which one must read carefully to know all they are meant to tell. The following paragraphs furnish questions and suggest lines of study which will often open the door of the child's mind to artistic appreciation.