"Jesus replied, You are in error because you do not know the Scriptures.'" — Matthew 22:29
The list below is not necessarily the "15 Best Loved" of all 929 chapters into which the various biblical books have been divided.
These 15 chapters may not be the "15 Most Well Known" chapters. I hesitate to even call them the "15 Most Significant" chapters.
However, these 15 chapters contain key scriptural events and themes that are the heart of the message of the Bible. They will help you grasp "God's big picture." At Southern Nazarene University, we think even a beginning student of the Bible should be somewhat familiar with all 15 chapters.
Other Bible chapters that could be considered for this list include: Exodus 3-4(God calls Moses), 1 Samuel 16 (Anointing of David as King), 2 Samuel 7 (God's covenant with David), .Isaiah 7:14 (Prophecy of the Virgin Birth), Daniel 3 (The Fiery Furnace), Daniel 6 (Daniel in the Lions' Den), Matthew 26-28 (The Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus, and Jesus's Great Commission), Luke 15 (Parables of the Lost Sheep, Coin, and Prodigal Son), John 3 (Nicodemus and the New Birth), Acts 9 (Conversion of Saul/Paul), Romans 3-4 (Justification by Faith), Romans 8 (Life in the Spirit), Galatians 5 (Freedom in Christ), Ephesians 2 (Saved by Grace through Faith), Philippians 2 (Christ's Humility and Exaltation), and Revelation 21-22 (New Heaven and New Earth).
The longest chapter of the Bible is Psalm 119. It has 176 verses and approximately 2,450 words (depending on which translation is consulted). The shortest chapter of the Bible is Psalm 117, with only two verses containing 17 words in the original Hebrew. [ more Bible trivia List of all Bible books with the number of chapters in each book]
Deciding which Bible chapters are the "most important" will vary from person to person. Factors that influence the significance given to certain chapters include:
Thought written written over perhaps 1,500 years by about 40 different authors, the Bible is one story. The 66 documents or "books" of the biblical canon tell that story and contain supporting material to enrich it.
The first eleven chapters of Genesis introduce that story. Those chapters set the stage and outline the plot: God's audacious attempt to win back His rebellious creation.
The story begins in earnest in Genesis 12 with the choosing of Abraham. The conclusion of the story is given in Revelation, the last book of the New Testament. There, John sees the fulfillment of what God had promised to Abraham, that through him, all nations would be blessed.
To boil scripture down to a one-page story, here -- in chronological order -- are the principal events that I think need to be in that storyline:
Like to try doing this summary from word pictures? See if you can write a one-page storyline for the Bible using this page of images
Sample of an actual student-written story of the entire Bible in one page
-- Howard Culbertson
"Hear, O Israel."
"But hear what? The Bible is hundreds upon hundreds of voices all calling at once out of the past and clamoring for our attention like barkers at a fair, like air-raid sirens, like a whole barnyard of cockcrows as the first long shafts of dawn fan out across the sky.
"Some of the voices are shouting, like Moses' voice, so all Israel, all the world, can hear. Some are so soft and halting that you can hardly hear them at all, like Job with ashes on his head and his heart broken or like old Simeon whispering, "Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace."1
"The prophets shrill out in their frustration, their rage, their holy hope, and madness. The priests drone on and on about the dimensions and furniture of the Temple. The lawgivers spell out what to eat and what not to eat; and the historians list the kings, the battles, and the tragic lessons of Israel's history.
"And somewhere in the midst of them all, one particular voice speaks out. It is unlike any other voice because it speaks so directly to the deepest privacy and longing and weariness of each of us that there are times when the centuries are blown away like mist. It is as if we stand with no shelter of time at all between ourselves and the one who speaks our secret name.
"Come," the voice says. "Unto me. All ye. Every last one." — Frederick Buechner
1Luke 2:29
from A Room Called Remember by Frederick Buechner. Quoted by Bob Benson in Disciplining for the Inner Life
"They asked each other, Were not our hearts burning within us while he talked with us on the road and opened the Scriptures to us?'" -- Luke 24:32
"I don't expect those outside Christianity to know the Christian book. But I do think the people of the Book should be familiar with it." — David Eikenberry, youth pastor
Introduction to Biblical Literature is a basic Bible facts course. That course was designed to help students acquire key Bible facts and grasp the narrative running through Scripture, material that is foundational to the Biblical interpretation and Christian doctrine courses.
These two stories on Biblical illiteracy illustrate why SNU students are required to take take a Bible survey course.
by Clayton Hardiman, Religion News Service, with some minor editing
For comedians, there are subjects that are almost too easy -- sure things that guarantee a laugh. For one host of a late-night television show, it was people's knowledge of the Bible. During one television show, the host moved through his audience, asking people what they knew about the Bible. "Name one of the Ten Commandments," he said.
"God helps those who help themselves?" someone ventured.
"Name one of the apostles," the host asked. No one could.
Finally, he asked them to name the Beatles. Without hesitation, the answer came ringing from throughout the crowd: George, Paul, John, and Ringo.
The television show host wasn't spoofing the Bible that evening. He was spoofing our society, which claims a grounding in Judeo-Christian principles, and yet -- according to a number of surveys -- is increasingly losing touch with the Scriptures of those two faiths.
Only two of 10 people participating in a Gallup survey correctly identified who delivered the Sermon on the Mount, said David Eikenberry, youth pastor at Orchard View Congregational Church in Muskegon, Michigan. "Typically, people could name only three or four of the Ten Commandments," Eikenberry said. Even that, however, did place Gallup's respondents ahead of Leno's "Tonight Show" audience.
Rev. Willie Burrel, pastor of Christ Temple Church in Muskegon Heights and a teacher with Western Michigan Bible Institute, also noted a decline in biblical literacy. "In order to be a practicing Christian, you have to be a Bible reader. There are a lot of un-practicing Christians," he said.
The trend can be attributed at least in part to "the busyness of people's schedules," Burrel said. "Because of their workload and play load, people are spending less time in the Word of God."
Eikenberry said he recently gave a simple quiz on Bible facts to people at his own church, Orchard View Congregational Church. The average score was just 40 percent -- and that, said Eikenberry, is no knock against his congregation. The truth, he said, is that many Christians are struggling. Eikenberry, who wrote a 100-page thesis on Bible literacy while working on a degree at Cornerstone College (Grand Rapids, Michigan), said people generally have some pieces of the puzzle but lack the framework in which those pieces fit in a meaningful way.
Eikenberry asked churches and youth pastors in West Michigan to administer a simple biblical literacy survey to parishioners. "The scores were just atrocious," he said. "I don't expect those outside Christianity to know the Christian book, but shouldn't people of the Book be familiar with it?"
In China, people have the time and interest to read Bibles, but because of government restrictions, they have no access to them. On the other hand, Eikenberry said, "We live in an America, where we have Bibles everywhere, and yet we're too busy to read them."
The Bible's impact on American culture is immense. It goes beyond values or faith. Without biblical references, lots of phrases would never have made it into our language. People season their conversations daily with phrases like "eye for an eye" and Good Samaritans. They talk about the lure of "forbidden fruit." They refer to burdensome circumstances as their "cross to bear." They balance competing priorities by "robbing Peter to pay Paul." Mismatched opponents are compared to David and Goliath. Often, people use such phrases without a clue as to their biblical origin. [ more ]
Educators tell horror stories about intellectually advanced students who fail to recognize literary references to Jonah or the prodigal son.
Generally, people know the Bible's major figures -- Adam, Abraham, David, Solomon, and Jesus. However, ask them to put those names chronologically, and they are stumped. The question is: Why?
In part, Eikenberry sees growing biblical illiteracy as a kind of reaction against educational methods of the past. "For a time," he said, "there was a kind of overstated catechism in the mainline churches. Now people are saying, `I didn't learn anything -- I'm not sending my kid.' The pendulum has swung the other way."
A kind of educational inertia has also set in, causing parents to pass more and more responsibility for their children's education to professional educators.
Eikenberry believes Sunday School alone cannot make people biblically literate. "Would you send your kid to learn math or science for just an hour a week with no homework?" he asked. "Yet we think that kids will learn the Bible by osmosis."
Biblical illiteracy may also be part of a general malaise in education. "It's a dumbed-down society," Eikenberry said. "Literacy, in general, has suffered."
Whatever the reason, people are reading the Bible less. Occasional Bible readers declined from 79 percent of Americans to 59 percent in just twenty years, according to a Gallup Poll. Only 16 percent of Christians polled said they read the Bible daily.1
Some Christian leaders are trying to fight back. Eikenberry has established a couple of biblical literacy classes at Muskegon Community College. Burrel, who says Bible study is a priority in his church, has challenged members of his church to read 10 chapters daily to "get deeper in the Word."
"Some of them were so happy I put that out there," Burrel said. "Some of our young people are doing it -- some of our very young children."
distributed by the Associated Press (AP). Edited and used with permission.
"Great is the Lord's anger that burns against us because our fathers have not obeyed the words of this book; they have not acted in accordance with all that is written there concerning us" -- 2 Kings 22:13 (King Josiah's words upon discovering the lost Book of the Law)
1Gallup, Alec and Wendy W. Simmons, "Six in Ten Americans Read Bible at Least Occasionally," The Gallup Organization.
Decades ago, Rudolf Flesch's book Why Johnny Can't Read startled the world of public education. Flesch's book pointed to an alarming trend among America's children. Simply put, Flesch said: "Many of them cannot read. Not well, anyway." In his book, Flesch attempted to trace the roots of this educational embarrassment. Then, he suggested ways to reverse the tide of functional illiteracy.
Decades have come and gone. The "Johnny" of Flesch's book is now at least a grandfather. Hopefully, he's a better reader than he was when Flesch wrote his book. Sadly, there is one area where Johnny still can't read. Not well, anyway. Simply put: Johnny cannot (or at least doesn't) read the Bible.
Some time ago, a George Barna survey showed that, in a typical week, 22% of evangelical Christians do not read the Bible at all. Another thirty percent read something in the Bible only once or twice a week. The reason? People say regular Bible reading is hard to maintain, that busy schedules and lack of good reading plans hinder Bible reading. Others say that they find Bible study boring and not life-related.
For many people, direct encounters with the Written Word have given way to books about the Bible that "guarantee" immediate application to life. It has become easy to let others tell us what the Bible says. Tragically, when Christians go to a best-selling Christian book or to a commentary rather than to the Bible itself, they miss out on direct contact with God's Word.
This lack of direct encounters with the Bible concerns me. I am a Nazarene whose heritage is within the Wesleyan theological tradition. John Wesley once said: "Let me be homo unius libri (a man of one book)." Furthermore, being Wesleyan also means we're Protestant. Thus, we should stand on the foundational principles of the Protestant Reformation of the 1500s. One of those key Reformation principles was that Christians can and may read God's Word for themselves. This principle of direct access to the Bible was so critical to early Reformers that many of them forfeited their lives promoting it.
Today, many adult church members are "biblically illiterate" – lacking the skills, confidence, and even the incentive to read the Bible as a daily guide for life. Today, I have to wonder if we Protestants — by our lack of Bible reading and study — are making proper use of that right to read the Bible, which so many people sacrificed to make possible.
Recently, I observed an animated Sunday school class session. Those present were discussing some political topics. While several people quoted the Bible in support of their particular perspective, no one actually opened God's Word and read the words written there. In this case and others like it, Sunday School sessions become simply "Christians discussing" rather than being "Christian discussions."
What can churches do to reverse the rising tide of biblical illiteracy? Here are some strategies:
Some time ago, James Smart wrote a book titled The Strange Silence of the Bible in the Church. In that book, he urged church leaders to keep biblical preaching prominent. Smart said, "The church that no longer hears the essential message of the Scriptures soon ceases to understand what it is for and is open to being captured by the dominant religious philosophy of the moment."
We must let the words of the prophets, of the apostles, and of Jesus sound in our ears. We call ourselves people of the Word. Let's make that statement true.
Originally written by Randy Cloud and published in The Herald of Holiness (now Holiness Today). Revised, adapted, and used for educational purposes under U.S. copyright laws.
"Present yourself to God as one approved, a workman who . . . correctly handles the word of truth" — 2 Timothy 2:15
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-- Howard Culbertson,