I thought this infographic might be of some interest to Logos users...at least a good reading project if nothing else.
http://overviewbible.com/10-least-popular-books-bible-infographic/
Disclaimer: Not my website/no affiliation.
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Thank you, Doc.
Interesting list. I suppose we shouldn't be surprised.
Two are my top fav's (Joel and Jude) which 'book-end' the early Christians theologies. You could actually loose the Paulines, paste in Joel, and end up in modern Christianity today.
"God will save his fallen angels and their broken wings He'll mend."
Thanks for the share, Dr. Boren!
=D
--
Jeffrey Kranz
http://overviewbible.com
This list makes sense to me but makes we wonder what the bottom three are and which is the at the absolute bottom.
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What is the criterion for "Least Popular"? Least read? Least favorite? I have doubts about this kind of "info" for a few reasons, one being validity and another being utility, among others.
I seriously doubt these are the least read. Many of these are very short books, and for that reason alone they are more likely to get "reading time" and attention than say 1 & 2 Chronicles. Anyway, I've already probably spent more time on this than it deserves.
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David Paul:What is the criterion for "Least Popular"? Least read?
Least read on Bible Gateway. (data provided by Bible Gateway)
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Bruce Dunning:and which is the at the absolute bottom.
According to the blog post, the bottom book is Obadiah.
Doc B: Bruce Dunning:and which is the at the absolute bottom. According to the blog post, the bottom book is Obadiah.
I didn't fully read the post. Thanks for pointing that out.
I'm going to guess that a big part of the reason these are the least read is because they are also the least referred to in general. Obadiah in particular is a kind of isolated book, being as it is--on the surface--only about Edom and its punishment. That isn't a highly referenced subject. But it is also the shortest book in the Tanakh (just one chapter), so it ought to get some readership for that reason alone--and I'm quite sure it does, in paper Bibles. But online, where searching is a big element of the process, it doesn't translate as readily to "eyeballs" and "page views".
Doc B: I thought this infographic might be of some interest to Logos users...at least a good reading project if nothing else. http://overviewbible.com/10-least-popular-books-bible-infographic/ Disclaimer: Not my website/no affiliation.
I see they have a whale of a time there.
georgegfsomsel
יְמֵי־שְׁנוֹתֵינוּ בָהֶם שִׁבְעִים שָׁנָה וְאִם בִּגְבוּרֹת שְׁמוֹנִים שָׁנָה וְרָהְבָּם עָמָל וָאָוֶן
Yes - Jude is number 8...
guess who starts a 4-6 week series on the Book of Jude this Sunday
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Haggai is on the list? It is a book which should be studied together with Ezra, Nehemiah and Zachariah. Makes for a very interesting and profitable study!
I congratulate you for that. I taught for several weeks about this book and it was a great experience. It seemed that the book was written thinking about the Church of this century.
I have Jude and Philemon pretty well covered. Peter H. Davids 2 volumes on Jude and ECC and AYBC on Philemon to namemajor ones, some of these in Accordance bought when there were sales.
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