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![Reading the Bible, Missing the Gospel: Recovering from (Shockingly Common) Ways We Get the Bible Wrong in our Everyday Lives by [Ben Connelly, Jared C Wilson]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41S3TFRNeiL._SY346_.jpg)
Reading the Bible, Missing the Gospel: Recovering from (Shockingly Common) Ways We Get the Bible Wrong in our Everyday Lives Kindle Edition
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Don’t keep asking God for forgiveness. Do judge one another. And you’re not going to heaven for all eternity!
How have we misunderstood the teachings of Jesus? Often His message to the leaders and disciples was: You’re getting this wrong! Somewhere along the way you got confused, lost, way off track. Would He have the same assessment of us today?
In Reading the Bible, Missing the Gospel, pastor and author Ben Connelly shows us how to recover God’s original intentions in light of the story of redemption. Connelly helps us celebrate and understand how Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection are truly good news for the tangible situations in our everyday lives. Biblical misunderstandings can lead to a small view of God—but truth overturns that. It expands our hearts for God and enables us to truly love others!
Using theology, humor, and practical examples the author reveals shockingly common ways we get the Bible wrong. Connelly invites Christians to see themes and teachings with new eyes—or, rather, with old eyes—on topics like confession and forgiveness . . . what it means to be blessed or happy . . . whether we’re commanded to or prohibited from passing judgement. How does the gospel inform our understanding and answer these questions? Connelly gives readers a new gospel-focused lens that addresses common frustrations and helps them see with renewed hope, clarity, and courage.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMoody Publishers
- Publication dateSept. 6 2022
- File size17201 KB
From the Publisher
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Reading the Bible, Missing the Gospel | A Field Guide for Everyday Mission | |
Focus | Recovering from (Shockingly Common) Ways We Get the Bible Wrong in Our Everyday Lives | 30 Days and 101 Ways to Demonstrate the Gospel |
Product description
From the Back Cover
Don't keep asking God for forgiveness. Do judge one another. And you're not going to heaven for all eternity!
How have we misunderstood the teachings of Jesus? Often His message to the leaders and disciples was: You're getting this wrong!Somewhere along the way you got confused, lost, way off track. Would He have the same assessment of us today?
Every time we approach the Scriptures, we must start and end with God--rather than with people. When we see Jesus as true hero and Redeemer in the commands and story of the Bible, our relationship with God, with others, and every aspect of our lives is rightly formed and understood.
In Reading the Bible, Missing the Gospel, pastor and author Ben Connelly reveals shockingly common ways we mis-read and mis-interpret the Bible. He invites us to see the Bible's themes and teachings through a new lens--or, rather, God's intended lens--on topics like confession and forgiveness . . . what it means to be blessed or happy . . . and the role of church in a believer's faith.
Using theology, humor, and practical examples, this book invites readers to recover a gospel-infused lens that corrects common misunderstandings and helps us recover God's original message in the Bible. Connelly helps us see and celebrate how Jesus' life, death, resurrection, and reign are refreshingly good news for the tangible situations in our everyday lives.
--This text refers to the paperback edition.About the Author
BEN CONNELLY is a pastor, author, equipper, and occasional professor. He is honored to serve everyday disciples, ministry leaders, and church planters across the world through The Equipping Group, and to help lead Salt+Light Community and Plant Fort Worth, TX. Ben has written or contributed to several books, workbooks, articles, and publications, has overseen church planting efforts for multiple organizations, and has also taught university and seminary classes. He and Jess have three children and at times host short-term foster kids too. Learn more at www.benconnelly.com, or @connellyben on various social media platforms.
]]> --This text refers to the paperback edition.Product details
- ASIN : B09SFV7SMT
- Publisher : Moody Publishers (Sept. 6 2022)
- Language : English
- File size : 17201 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 193 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #669,436 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #1,207 in Bible & Sacred Texts
- #5,283 in Christian Living (Kindle Store)
- #14,878 in Sacred Text Study Guides
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Ben Connelly is a pastor, author, equipper, and occasional professor.
He is honored to serve everyday disciples, ministry leaders, and church planters across the world through The Equipping Group, and to help lead Salt+Light Community and Plant Fort Worth in Fort Worth, TX.
Ben has written/contributed to several books, workbooks, articles, and publications, has overseen church planting efforts for multiple organizations, and has also taught university and seminary classes. He and Jess have three children and at times, host short-term foster kids too.
Learn more at benconnelly.com or @connellyben on various social media platforms.
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Since then, I have learned that missing Jesus as the point of the Bible is a common phenomenon among Christians. And this is dangerous since misreading the Bible leads to misinterpretation, which results in misapplication. Therefore, Ben Connelly wrote Reading the Bible, Missing the Gospel: Recovering From (Shockingly Common) Ways We Get the Bible Wrong in Our Everyday Lives.
He says, “But even if we don’t realize it, many earnest followers of Jesus see the words of the Bible through the wrong lens…and the danger is greater than just giving us a headache: these wrong lenses lead us to miss the very heart of the Bible altogether and thus misinform various aspects of our walk with God, our relationships with others, and our everyday lives.”
The book has two main parts. In part one, “Spiritual Eye Exam,” Connelly explains the symptoms and remedy of missing the gospel while reading the Bible. And in part two, titled “Learning to See Clearly,” Connelly explores six examples of well-known verses and details how we commonly misunderstand or misapply them.
Reading the Bible Missing the Gospel is easy to read, biblical, and practical. However, I found the title slightly misleading. I expected this book to focus on biblical hermeneutics with detailed steps for reading the Bible correctly. But the instruction was light, and most of the book focused on select examples of misunderstood verses.
As for the content, I did not agree with some of the author’s claims. For instance, in part one, Connelly lists various lenses through which we can read the Bible. These are theology, historical, moral, devotional, and rules. He says these ways focus “on the words of the text but miss the true Word.” Instead, we must read the Bible considering Jesus’s life, death, resurrection, and reign. I agree that reading the Bible in light of the gospel is critical, but I don’t think it is mutually exclusive to the other lenses. Particularly the theology and historical ones, as this helps us interpret the text correctly so we can understand it in light of the gospel.
Another point where I am unsure I agree with the author is on asking forgiveness. I frequently ask for forgiveness for my sins, and I was interested in learning why it may not be biblical. Connelly states there are no examples or commands to ask God for repeated forgiveness in the New Testament after the resurrection. And he says not even the Lord’s prayer counts because Jesus gave this instruction before the resurrection; hence, it is a petition for God’s initial forgiveness (as in justification).
I am not sure what to make of this statement. Jesus started the prayer with “Our Father,” which implies it is for believers. It is for people who are already forgiven through Christ by looking either forward or backward to the cross. Furthermore, I always understood that this petition for forgiveness was related to our intimate relationship with God, not our standing. I will have to study this issue more.
Overall, Reading the Bible Missing the Gospel is a good book. It features a lot of helpful information about the story of the Bible and additional tips on Bible study that would mostly suit a new believer. But I did not really enjoy reading it and learned little from it.
Moody publishers graciously gave me a copy, and this is my honest review.
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