Table of Contents
Summary
This work is a fifteen chapters long with an appendix. In this work Anstey explains several Bible study methods: Synthetic, Parallel, Topical, Typical, Cyclopedic, Microscopic, and Explanatory, which take up chapter 4 in 7 subdivisions.
AIM: Congregationalist
CIM: Bibliology, Interpretation-Understanding.
Version: 1.1 June 10, 2014
Contents for How to Master Bible
1. How to Understand the Bible
2. How to Enjoy the Bible
3. How to Authenticate the Bible
4. How to Study the Bible:
4A. The Synthetic Method, or Bible Study by Books
4B. The Parallel Method, or Bible Study by Marginal References
4C. The Topical Method, or Bible Study by Topics
4D. The Typical Method, or Bible Study by Types
4E. The Cyclopedic Method, or Bible Study by Bible Dictionary
4F. The Microscopic Method, or Bible Study by Concordance
4G. The Explanatory Method, or Bible Study by Commentary
5. How to Master the Bible
6. How to Wield the Bible
7. How to Enthrone the Bible
8. How to Defend the Bible
Appendix
formatted by David Cox 2009
[email protected]
Commentary by David Cox
This work basically goes over the basics of how to study the Bible, looking at different methods. In general this is very profitable for new believers, but also for every Christian to review periodically. While I don’t recommend Anglican authors as a general rule, the principles laid out in this work are the same principles that I have seen in a dozen or more similar works by all kinds of theologians.
More Works on Bible Study Methods Category
- Adeney How to Read the Bible
- Anderson Sir Robert – Bible or the Church
- Anstey – How to Master Bible
- Austin-Sparks Spiritual Hearing
- Cox Study the Bible using theWord
- Fairbairn, Patrick – The Typology of Scripture (2 vols)
- Gray – Synthetic Bible Studies
- Ridout, Samuel – How to Study the Bible
- Smith – Basics of Bible Interpretation
- Stalker, James – How to Study the Bible
- Tidwell Bible Period by Period
- Wiseman – The Miracle Book and its Key (the Bible)
anstey-how-to-master-the-biblebibliologycongregationalist.gbk_.twm
Advertisement
This class explains how to change the skin (theme colors) of theWord.
Martin Anstey was a Bible Chronologer significant for his contribution to Biblical Literalism for successfully resolving the apparent time gaps contained within the Bible’s internal chronology. In 1913 Anstey’s thesis, ‘The Romance of Bible Chronology’ was published, explaining how subtle pieces of information within the Bible text resolve these apparent chronological gaps.