I have started a New Project called Digital Bible Stories, I know they are EBooks, and other Digital products, that are advertised, but my product is different and it is something that is very unique, if anyone is desiring to learn the Word of God thru Story-telling. As a child I remember when I was 3-4 years old, way back then, I'm now 70, my Grandma had a table beside her rocking chair, she kept a big family bible on it, many times times when I would go see her; sometime during the day or evening she would set me on her lap, put that big Bible on my legs, it had beautiful pictures in it, I would open the Bible, point to a picture, she would tell me a Bible Story, to which I still remember to this day. From that experience all thru my childhood, even until today, it was such a Beautiful experience, and I still remember to this day, and has proven to enhance my life. Hearing the Word of God, mixed, with the Faith of a Child or an Adult will bring purpose to our life, knowing the Almighty God in that time is still the Same God in our day, how do I know, because the Precious Word of God tells me. Please give me your thoughts on this New Project, thank you so very much. James

I am in the process of transitioning my business from its beginnings in freelance editing of spiritual books to publishing of digital resources for religious educators, so we are coworkers in the same vineyard. I am happy to wish you success in your business and your ministry!


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You haven't described what your customers will receive, other than "digital file" of type "MPEG-1". Buyers will need more information: is this an animated story, a still photo with single-person narration over it, a reenactment, etc. The listing descriptions give an overly detailed summaries of well-known stories that aren't necessary for people who already familiar (likely your target audience). Instead, describe the file itself and what the buyer is going to be experiencing from it.

I started this journey to see if I could find a suitable digital replacement for well used, but more often then not, unreadable Bible. To accomplish this, I would need to find a unique combination of hardware, software and experience across many different Bible uses. I expected that I would solve for a few of these use cases, but still find myself switching from analog to digital regularly.

Today, I am all digital. I read my ESV Digital Scripture Journal Bible in either the iPadOS files app or in a PDF reader, taking notes with my Apple Pencil in the margins as I go. Often, I will have the Moody Bible Commentary eBook up in split screen so that I can read what it says as well. I find this a very effective was to do Bible Study.

I've been thinking quite a bit about this later and have not personally found that my digital Bible study has suffered compared to my previous paper-version study. Perhaps it may be that I grew up in a paper context and migrated to a digital one.

I am curious to hear what others are observing about this. Do you think that digital Bible reading/study is negatively impacting your "comprehension, memory and correct interpretation"? Or do you think that it may be different within a Logos environment?

The biggest danger are distractions by emails, WhatsApp, push notifications from "Simpsons Tapped Out" etc. For that reason I have a dedicated device for Bible reading and study only. At Bible study group, we all use digital tools. But then, I'm the only non millennial in the group. At church, I'd say Bible usage during the service is low because of the projector.

I totally get this part of the challenge of a digital environment and great discipline is needed not to get distracted. I was recently exposed to a book called "Digital Minimalism" by Cal Newport - -minimalism/ that showed how distractions are a major factor in lack of productivity these days. Studies show that our effectiveness is reduced by 10x when we shift focus even for a few minutes which is pretty normal in our "connected" world. I've been working to try to focus more - especially when in the digital world.

Jan Krohn:Logos provides the tools to make digital Bible study even deeper than paper Bible study. However, most people I know don't use Logos but much simpler tools such as YouVersion.

Bruce Dunning:I am curious to hear what others are observing about this. Do you think that digital Bible reading/study is negatively impacting your "comprehension, memory and correct interpretation"? Or do you think that it may be different within a Logos environment?

Does reading digitally change the way we perceive and receive the message? Yes, in subtle ways it does. These changes can both detract (e.g. being interrupted by notifications) and enhance. A balanced response discusses both.

There are advantages and disadvantages to both. I certainly prefer digital for many reasons. However: I have known a few godly men (and women!) who had "that one bible" for many years (if not nearly a lifetime). They had notes scribbled in them and knew exactly where everything was. They had their own form of crosslink references. I can understand the advantages of that and think it was something special.

I have found that over time a pattern has emerged of preferring a paper bible for devotional reading and electronic formats for digging deeper and academic study. Picking up a physical Bible brings a sense of anticipation that is difficult to define.

Bruce Dunning:I've been thinking quite a bit about this later and have not personally found that my digital Bible study has suffered compared to my previous paper-version study. Perhaps it may be that I grew up in a paper context and migrated to a digital one.

I know both my personal bible reading and my deeper study have been enhanced because of Logos. Due to my location and circumstances, I simply would not be able to have all the resources I have in Logos if I had to get them in print. Plus being able to study in the dark has a lot of advantages for me. At this stage, I've very satisfied with what I'm doing in my personal study.

At my church, the majority of people use a digital Bible (usually phones) both in services and in Bible studies. Yes, they get distracted by other things on them. It's been my habit for a very long time to include all the Bible verses I'm using in my printed notes, so I just read off of that and rarely bring a print Bible. I don't feel bad using my phone or laptop to look up something impromptu, but I sometimes feel bad about not having a paper Bible with me. I have a nice, nearly pristine (well, pristine till very recently ) one I've reserved just for preaching and teaching that I bring sometimes and tell myself to use to try to set a good example. And then I see how small the print is and pull out my phone.

I'm 30 years old and in my case, I almost never use a paper bible anymore as all of my regular bible reading and study is done through logos (web app, iOS app, laptop, etc.). I can't say I have noticed any decline in memorisation over the time I have been using Logos nor in depth of study (in case of the later the opposite is true. But then again, as others have noted Logos is a different beast. Or maybe I did notice a decline in my memory retention but then couldn't remember it or did I remember but fail to recall... :-P

When I read on Logos, I tend to read the bible on my laptop with a Morphological visual filter which colours each word based on whether it is a noun, verb, adjective, etc. and I have a very visual highlighting system which places coloured symbols in the margin based on whether it is a key point in the authors argument, a standout quote, a pastoral application, etc. I believe these visual elements help me retain the information better, but of course, I can't prove it. I do think too, that it can be harder to see connections in the text on digital bibles simply because you can't 'zoom out' and scan four columns of text across two pages or quickly flick back and forth - although logos column view on a large monitor helps, not so much on an iPhone.

The only exceptions to my digital-only approach are that I tend to use a paper bible when I lead our elderly folk's bible study group, whilst some in the group use tablets for bible reading, a number are made uncomfortable by the sight of the study leader using one. I'm happy to be one less distraction, so I take a paper bible. I'd do the same for pastoral (home and hospital) visits and when reading in the Sunday service. Aesthetically speaking, I think the visible presence of a bible is important in those contexts but this may be generational. I also tend to have a paper bible on my desk when sermon writing (but not during the sermon's study phase), but that is more to do with Logos search speed ;P. Finally, I mark up my passage, by hand and write out my study notes and outline by hand. Again, this is a preference thing, if I don't write them out by hand I end up making notes like I'm about to write an academic paper. The physical sermon I type in Atom.

One thing which will be interesting is to see how these trends change over the next 15-30 years. Currently, even most millennials are digital migrants; the vast majority of us can remember a time before home computers, smartphones and the internet. Further, most children still learn to read and write using physical media (wooden pencil, paper book). I suspect (but can't prove) that those born post-2010 will not struggle with the dilemma (digital v. paper) as much as there parents and grandparents generation have and for those who are (eventually) schooled in a digital-only environment will probably look back and wonder what all the fuss was about.

With paper we quickly have to learn the order of the books in order to find references. With digital, I can go to Habakkuk 3:16 just as fast as I can go to John 3:16. Before I needed to know that Habakkuk was one of the minor prophets and located near the end of the OT and John was the fourth gospel in the NT. With digital I don't need to know the order of the books. I don't even need to know if it is in the OT or the NT. I can see how coming to a digital Bible first really changes the experience. ff782bc1db

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