Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Ministries|Mon, Aug. 13 2007 05:32 PM EDT

Bible Society Defends Newspaper Scriptures

By Eric Young|Christian Post Reporter

The American Bible Society defended another Bible society’s efforts to distribute Scripture through secular newspapers in America after hearing that the project was receiving complaints from some Christians.

International Bible Society and Send the Light (IBS-STL), which merged earlier this year, is planning to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to distribute New Testament Bibles with 11 newspapers this year and next. The Bible ministry's "City Reachers" project aims to reach newspaper subscribers in eight regions next year, according to its Web site. Three others, including the one in Fort Worth, Texas, are scheduled this year.

“The American Bible Society (ABS) wholeheartedly supports the CityReachers’ initiative to distribute Scripture through newspapers,” stated the Rev. Dr. Paul Irwin, president of ABS, in a statement released to The Christian Post. “The effort ensures that people will have access to the Bible and the opportunity to experience its life-changing message.”

The Bible society leader's comments were made after hearing that there was an outcry against IBS-STL's project coming from one of the least expected sources – Christians.

Bob Ray Sanders, vice president and associate editor of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, which announced in May that it would deliver more than 200,000 New Testaments the last Sunday of the year, said some worried that the Bibles tossed on the lawn with the newspaper would be thrown away.

"I expected that we'd get some criticism, but I thought it would be coming from people who were not Christian or not religious at all. Many of the complaints we got were from people who were Christian and didn't like the idea," said Sanders, according to The Associated Press.

In response, ABS’s Irwin said that while Christians who fear that Bibles will be thrown away have a valid concern, “fear cannot keep Bible Societies from spreading the Word to the masses.”

“If one person keeps the Bible and gives their soul to Christ, then the effort was well worth it,” the ministry leader stated.

“The American Bible Society regularly distributes Bibles as special events and Scripture portions, such as a special one about God’s comfort and hope in the Bible, given to more than 1.5 million people after Hurricane Katrina. We must trust that God’s Word will fall on fertile soil and not be discarded.”

In his statement, Irwin also announced that ABS would be joining IBS-STL next year in distributing Scripture through newspapers, adding that “ever-changing distribution techniques are a sign of the times.”

“It has been the history of the American Bible Society to find new and innovative ways to spread God’s Word, from being the first to put Bibles in hotels in 1846, and on steamships and railroads in the 1850s to transcribing Scripture onto DVDs and mobile devices,” the ABS president stated. “The ever-changing distribution techniques are a sign of the times, personifying the fundamental purpose of the American Bible Society’s mission: ‘Sharing God’s Word with the world.’”

According to IBS-STL’s Paul Tolleson, major fundraising for the "City Reachers" project in Fort Worth and other cities has only just begun. Some campaigns already have been delayed, but none have been canceled.

On its website, the ministry emphasizes the importance of the Bible in a “confused society.”

“It is a sourcebook for everyday living. We find standards for our conduct, guidelines for knowing right from wrong, principles to help us in a confused society where so often ‘anything goes,’" IBS-STL declares on its website.

In 2006, the International Bible Society and the Send the Light announced a merger between the two ministries creating one of the world’s largest translators and distributors of Scripture while becoming a leading global distributor of Christian literature.

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  • Tue Aug 14, 2007 1:15 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    While I personally would not make a complaint against such a distribution, I can understand the concern. In Fort Worth for example ... that is 200,000 copies. Imagine what that could do for countries that are actually requesting for more Bible literature. I think before judging whether or not this type of outreach is strategic, we should get some more stats first, if possible.

  • artm »
    Tue Aug 14, 2007 9:25 am Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    Wow, hampstead, I didn't know you were so versed in the Holy Word of God. Watch out all you Christians, we have a Bible Scholar in our midst. Art.

  • Tue Aug 14, 2007 8:14 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 4

    As Isaac Asimov once said: "The bible, properly read, is the finest proponent of atheism ever devised." Problem is, no one reads the black parts (the words), everyone wants to read only the white parts (between the lines) and offer an "interpretation" of what THEY think is really meant.

    Just one "for instance:" Chapters one and two of Genesis offer what are obviously two different, distinct accounts of the so-called "creation" of the universe. Clearly we have an example of inputs from two authors, from different time periods, cobbled together and presented as one account.

    Not only is the creations of men and women done differently in the two accounts, almost everything else is created in a different order. Anyone reading the first two chapters with a critical eye would immediately notice the clear conflict here, but few literalists do. Why is that?

    When the bible is taught in public schools, emphasis should be placed upon conflicts such as this, but it is not for fear of "offending" someone.

    This is an interesting quote: "On its website, the ministry emphasizes the importance of the Bible in a “confused society.”"

    What could be more confusing then four gospel accounts that cannot agree on when christ was born, his lineage, the events surrounding his infancy or even the events surrounding his death?

  • Mon Aug 13, 2007 4:00 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    Shame on those Christians outcry against spreading the "Good News", that IS our commision
    after all, ISN'T IT? JESUS told us to take the gospels to "ALL THE WORLD"! you're right, that's
    something that I never thought that would ever come up, they are, in effect, denying ALL
    that Jesus set out to do

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