Mobile Ministry Magazine (MMM)

Posts Tagged ‘commentaries’

Have Tablets and Mobiles Changed How You View/Use the Bible

Sunday, April 22nd, 2012

Bible apps on Palm Treo and HP iPaq 1940A few days ago, a post went up over at the BigBible Project talking about six ways a phone can change your view of the Bible. An insightful and reflective post, the six points were:

  1. Instant access to a library of commentaries and translations
  2. Make the text your own (w/highlights, notes and bookmarks)
  3. Bible reading becomes public and social
  4. Bible reading can be monitored and held accountable
  5. Bible reading becomes private and invisible
  6. Software is interpretation

Those reasons caused me to reflect a good bit towards how I’ve changed and evolved because of Bibles on my tablets and mobile devices. Some of the points from BigBible Project’s article fit – but then I realized how I’ve gone in a bit more on aa few of them.

For example, the idea of instant access to commentaries and translations is less important than what it used to be. I’m more interested in the sociological, geological, and other historical documents that affirm or challenge the text. Instead of highlights and bookmaks, I draw. I don’t care to be so public with me reading; but I do like the ease some services offer in sharing the text (such as Bib.ly and Ref.ly). Software is definitely interpretation – and that’s where I feel that biblical literacy shouldn’t just be reading the text, but building it as well. Its interesting, and through that list I can see how far I’ve come since getting that digital Bible on a PDA more than a decade ago.

So what about you? How has tablets and mobiles, or just the access to various Biblical services or classes, changed how you use or view the Bible? Do you see anything to be alarmed about it what has changed for you? Or, do you like the way in which you are evolving?

 

Your Mobile Effect, After Your Life

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

Pumpkin and Flower - Share on OviToday, I’m attending the first of two funerals for a family member that recently passed. As with many sudden deaths, there’s a bit of a scramble to make sure that the deceased’s estate is taken care of. When my mother and I sat to talk about this passing versus my father’s passing over a decade ago, we talked about things such as “where is your emergency information” and “how would my mother notify my ‘digital relationships’ about my passing.”

Those are certainly some important questions and caused me to make sure that my digital information and archives are put in a position that emergency personnel and my family/friends are able to make the right decisions concerning my properties. But, I was left at a bit of a loss when I thought about that effect in terms of digital spaces. Especially since I do a lot online (where I’m usually the teacher to my friends/family) and what I do I actually hope that it has more of an effect when I’m done than when I’m working in it.

The last part is what I’d want to open the door to. We have books like Foxe’s Book of Martyrs or even various commentaries and quotations of those who heard many fathers/mothers of the faith and recorded them. This is great, and has left for us an amazing wealth of knowledge and perspectives with which to mature our walk of faith. When we go digital, or our ministry is mobile (mobile = portable, action-oriented instead of doctrine-defining), how much of that becomes left into the residue that becomes the following generations of faith?

For example, you’ve taken Netcasters (read our review) to heart and have created a space where you’ve discipled several believers from various regions on how to create and share Gospel-centered literature. Your legacy looks like that of a pastor-teacher or evangelist, however the fruit of your labors isn’t that people copy your materials to others, but that they develop materials themselves to which is passed on. Does it matter if your name is written into the faithfulness of that effort? Does it matter if you did or didn’t do all you could to make this effort more successful? If you will, can your digital actions create – really, continue – in the rich history of using various technologies to share the impact of the love of Christ to the world?

I often ask, “in 100 years, when someone looks back on my life, will they be able to measure my life/actions against Scripture and it be clear that I am doing something in the same line of faith and love that the Bible records? Or, is what I do and how I live so far off that I’d be considered apostate and a sign of what not to do?” Does mobile (in) ministry look like the fruit of the faith? I surely hope so, but really, that’s something that will be judged better when I’m gone than when I’m here.

 

Mobify empowers marketers and developers to create amazing mobile web experiences. Tap to learn more

Mobify