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Archive for March, 2011

Improved Navigation on ESV Study Bible, Kindle Edition

Good news: We’ve released a significant update for the ESV Study Bible, Kindle Edition, and it includes a feature that allows you to quickly navigate to any verse.

If you own a previous version of the ESV Study Bible, Kindle Edition, you’ll want to replace it with the new file; you may have to go to Amazon.com’s “Manage Your Kindle” page to reinstall it. Please note that because this is an entirely new file, any notes and highlighting that you’ve made on an earlier version will be lost.

To quickly access to a verse, first open up the ESV Study Bible and click the “menu” button, and then the “index” option. Then start typing the book (using 2- or 3-letter abbreviations) and the chapter and the verse (each separated by spaces). Then click on the “find” button. That’s it!

You can read more detailed navigation instructions in the “How to Use the ESV Study Bible, Kindle Edition” section of the eBook, which you access by going to “Menu > Go To > Beginning.”

This may be a good time to also update your Kindle operating system; you can find the latest Kindle OS on Amazon’s site.

Note: The new navigation feature doesn’t work on the 1st Generation Kindle.

We really appreciate your constructive criticism; without it, we may not have revisited the ESV Study Bible’s navigation as quickly. Please leave additional feedback below, and we’ll do our best to answer your questions and pass your concerns along to our developers.

Feel free to spread the word to your friends about this significant update by clicking through to Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. via one of the icons below.

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March 8, 2011 | Posted in: Digital,ESV,Study Bibles | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 6:00 am | (43) Comments »

Free eBook: Healing for a Broken World

Do you have an iPad? Kindle? Click on Amazon or iTunes to download your free copy of Healing for a Broken World: Perspectives on Public Policy by Steven Monsma. Offer ends March 31, 2011.

What’s Healing for a Broken World about?

What does it mean to a Christian citizens? How can we respond to contemporary public policy issues such as genocide, global AIDS, global warming, and human trafficking according to Scripture rather than political agendas?

With American evangelicals having more political influence than ever before, this book is especially important. Author Steve Monsma establishes the foundational biblical principles that are relevant to our lives as Christian citizens no matter the topic. His book will equip all believers to make godly, humanitarian choices rather than purely political ones.

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March 7, 2011 | Posted in: Digital | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 3:09 pm | (6) Comments »

Affirmation is Not Optional in Marriage

Guest Post by Sam Crabtree

It is not optional to commend the commendable in a marriage.

The evaporating disappearance of affirmation in a marriage is invariably a contributing factor to virtually all divorces. Short of divorce, it also contributes to flatness, coolness, and degrees of alienation.

I can’t think of a divorce in which the pair kept up a steady stream of affirming and up-building speech toward each other. Rather, they slid into silence and faultfinding.

But God is at work, even in the most problematic husband or wife. All humans are made in the image of God, and until an individual has breathed his last, God is imaging forth something of himself. It is our privilege to spot such commendable qualities, and call them out with thanks to God.

That’s what I mean by commending the commendable. I am not speaking primarily of complimenting one’s mate for being good-looking or some other shallow, temporal feature… all of which will assuredly pass. I mean spotting some Christlike characteristic, and thanking God for it – “I thank God, dear husband, that he as made you the kind of man who dependably works hard to provide for his family.” Jesus is the most dependable person in existence, and if your husband is dependable, it is because Jesus has given him life, breath, and everything else. “I thank God, dear wife, for your determination in protecting our children.” Jesus is the most determined person in existence, setting his face to go to Jerusalem to fulfill the Father’s will at the cost of his own life, and if your wife is determined to serve her children, it is because God is working in her both to will and to do his good pleasure.

Husbands and wives who commend the commendable in each other honor God, refresh and encourage each other, gain a hearing from each other, model good things for their children and others who are watching, elevate the atmosphere in the home, and set up the possibility that the refreshment they have sown will come back to them at the right time.

Guest post by Sam Crabtree, author of Practicing Affirmation. Learn more or read a sample chapter.

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| Posted in: Author,Books,Loving Others,Marriage | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 1:00 pm | 0 Comments »

Sin and its Effects Are Similar to the Laws of Inertia…

“Sin and the effects of sin are similar to the laws of inertia: a person (or object) in motion will continue on that trajectory until acted upon by an outside force. If one is devastated by sin, a personal failure to rise above the effects of sin will simply create a snowball effect of shame. Hurting people need some­thing from the outside to stop the downward spiral. Fortunately, grace floods in from the outside at the point when hope to change oneself is lost. Grace declares and promises that you will be healed. One-way love does not command “Heal thyself!” but declares “You will be healed!”

Justin and Lindsey Holcomb from Rid of My Disgrace

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| Posted in: Abuse,Books,Sanctification/Growth | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 8:40 am | 0 Comments »

Friday Faves

It’s Friday! Check out a handful of posts that caught our attention this week:

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March 4, 2011 | Posted in: General | Author: Angie Cheatham @ 12:21 pm | 0 Comments »