Archive for the 'Educational' Category

New Customizable Toolbar on Palm

We have added a secondary customizable toolbar to the Palm OS beta BibleReader. You can choose what buttons you want on this toolbar and where this toolbar should be placed. When you don’t want the toolbar visible you can even hide it using the blue arrow button on the top of the toolbar. We have had many requests for a popup highlighting palette so that you would not have to always go to the highlighting preference screen each time you want to change your highlighting color. You can now do this with the secondary toolbar. First, go to the secondary toolbar preferences (Menu->Preferences->Secondary Toolbar). Second, remove the buttons from the secondary toolbar that you do not want. Finally, select the highlight colors from the drop down list that you want and click on Add. Now you can use the secondary toolbar to easily highlight with the colors that you want and you can hide the toolbar when you just want to read text.

Palm Secondary Toolbar

A New Way to View Search Results

We have added a new way to view search results on the new beta Pocket PC BibleReader which you can download here. You can now view your search results as a book on the main screen. Viewing search results as a book in the main screen has a number of advantages.

    Greek Search Results 

    1. Greek and Hebrew search results display in Greek and Hebrew fonts (see screen shot).
    2. You can more easily look at verses for the search results since you can work your way down the list clicking on the verse hyperlinks. You no longer have to reopen the search results list to find the next result you are interested in look at.
    3. There are options for how to display the search results. For example, you can choose to display the entire verse instead of just the context around the search result.
    4. There are no limits on the number of search results.
    5. You can open the search results as an eBook in your library and the search results will open to where you where last reading.

    You can turn on search results in the main screen by selecting the “Display Options” button in the lower left corner of the search screen and then checking the “Display Search Results In Main Screen” checkbox. This screen also has the options for how the search results are formated.

    In case you Palm users thought we were ignoring you with this new feature, don’t worry we are currently implementing this feature on Palm OS! See the screen shot (also notice the customizable secondary toolbar). These features will be in the next beta version for Palm OS :) This screen shot gives an example of some of the other formating options for the search results.
    Palm Search

Using Original Language Dictionaries without Understanding Greek or Hebrew

Many times when reading a passage I want to find out the meaning behind a word that I am reading. I would particularly like to find out the meaning of the Greek or Hebrew word behind the English translation using a scholarly original language dictionary like EDNT (Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament), Little Kittel (Theological Dictionary of the New Testament), or TWOT (Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament). The problem is that I do not know Greek or Hebrew. With the right tools from Olive Tree Bible Software this is possible for those that do not know Greek or Hebrew.CWSB Lookup Kiss

First, you need CWSB (Complete Word Study Bible). With the CWSB you can click on any English word in the KJV and get the Greek or Hebrew word behind that English word. For example, lets say you are reading Psalms 12:2, come across the phrase “Kiss the Son”, and you want to find out more about the word kiss from the Hebrew. With CWSB you can click on the word “Kiss” and it will display the Hebrew word and definition in the bottom window.

Second, you need an original language dictionary like EDNT, Little Kittle, TWOT, etc. For the rest of this example I am going to use TWOT.

Finally, you need iLumina Mobile. iLumina Mobile lets you assign a default dictionary and look up words in that dictionary.

To look up the Hebrew word for kiss in TWOT you need to set your default dictionary to TWOT. There are two ways to do this. You can set your default dictionary to TWOT by going to iLumina Preferences,CWSB Tap and Hold then clicking on “Default Files”, and selecting TWOT as the default dictionary. Alternately, if you have “Use Last Opened” as the default dictionary then you just need to open TWOT and it will be your default dictionary since it was the last opened dictionary.

Now tap and hold your stylus on the Hebrew word for kiss in the CWSB definition window. This will pull up the context menu. Select “Look up qvn in dictionary”. The Greek and Hebrew words are not displayed in Greek or Hebrew in the context menu. See the side picture for an example of how this is done.

This will pull up the dictionary input window for TWOT with the Hebrew word for kiss filled into the lookup field. You will need to look at the possible matches for the Hebrew word for kiss and pick the one that is the closest match. This will usually be the first match.

TWOT LookupNow click on “Go” to lookup the word in TWOT. This will bring up the definition for the Hebrew word behind Kiss in Psalms 12:2. This allows you to look up scholarly definitions for words from the KJV without knowing Greek or Hebrew.

This procedure works exactly the same with the Palm BibleReader as it does on Windows Mobile (Pocket PC) BibleReader.
TWOT Kiss

The Complete Word Study Bible Integrates Several Tools in One

If you’re looking for a one volume Bible study tool that combines a solid translation (KJV) with Stong’s numbers, inline grammatical data on every word, extensive cross-references, book introductions, footnote commentaries on key passages, Hebrew and Greek dictionaries, word studies, and more, the Complete Word Study Bible, published by AMG and available for your PDA or Smartphone from Olive Tree, may be just what you need. This work is the fruit of 46 years of research by noted scholar Dr. Spiro Zodhiates. Available in bookstores as a four-inch thick hardback, this treasure can now be held in your palm or stored in your pocket.

Let’s take a look briefly at how we can use CWSB to investigate a word, phrase, passage, or book from the Bible. Turning to John 1:1, we read “In the beginning was the Word…” We see the title John, the subtitle The Word Became Flesh, and two links, one to an introduction explaining the authorship, uniqueness, style, and contents of the Gospel of John. The other link pulls up a commentary on the subtitled section, John 1:1-17. In this footnote/commentary, we learn about the eternal existence of Christ as the Logos or “Intelligence” Who originated everything that exits, and we read about His becoming the expression of that Intelligence as a man. We also learn that the first of two Greek verbs for to be used in the passage indicates His eternal pre-existence while the second indicates His entrance into a new state and His continuation in that state. Hyperlinked cross references give us the opportunity to search out these observations. By the time we have read the introduction to John’s gospel and the commentary on 1:1-17, we have an understanding of the context in which John writes “in the beginning.”

Now we can go deeper by looking at the word beginning by tapping on Menu, Display, and Toggle Strongs. Here we see inline grammatical codes and Strong’s numbers in parentheses following each and every word. Tapping on the grammatical data, we see that the word beginning is anarthrous (that is, without an article) and that it is a noun. Rather than being left to ponder on our own what these grammatical facts mean, we can follow hyperlinks to clear and complete explanations of the significance of each fact. Tapping on the Strong’s number, we now see an extensive definition of the Greek word for beginning, including nine points about its usage in various ways in the Bible (complete with hyperlinked references). We also find an explanation of the word’s derivation, a list of synonyms with hyperlinked Strong’s numbers, and a list of antonyms, also with links. There is too much lexical information in this entry to go into in this article. Suffice it to say that the reader is given a rich impression of the eternal pre-existence of the Logos and His overwhelming pre-eminence in this universe along with a thorough knowledge of the word beginning as it used throughout the New Testament.

I hope these comments on the CWSB give some impression of its value to serious Bible students. With a mimimal knowledge of biblical languages, or even no knowledge at all, we can use the CWSB to lead us into a deeper understanding of the wonderful truths about Christ and the Church in the Bible.

How Do I Get a Concordance for My PDA or Smartphone?

Every serious student of the Bible appreciates the value of a concordance, not only for finding a verse one can’t seem to locate, but also for searching out the various places in the Scriptures where certain terms and topics are addressed.

Many users of Bible software for PDA’s and smartphones ask us to include concordances among our product offerings, not realizing that their BibleReader software already contains, in essence, copies of the great concordances by Strong, Young, and Cruden as well as the Englishman’s Hebrew and Greek Concordances. “I don’t remember buying them,” you say? That’s because you didn’t need to. Olive Tree’s search engine does everything any kind of printed concordance can do—actually, far more—and it does it much faster.

Searching for a particular verse? Just select a Bible, any Bible. (You can’t do that with the printed concordances because they are translation-specific.) Type in a word or phrase from the verse you are trying to find. Keep it short and simple because, unless you have the exact wording, you may not find what you’re looking for. I would like to use the New King James Version, NKJV, to look for the verse that says, “The Spirit is life because of righteousness.” I set the search engine to look for an exact match, limit the range to the New Testament, type the words “Spirit is life,” and away we go. In a second, literally, I’ve discovered that the verse I’m looking for is Romans 8:10. By selecting that verse and tapping “Go to,” I’m there in an instant, ready to read. Try doing this with a printed concordance. You’ll probably find that it takes much longer.

Or maybe you would just like to look up the word “faith” in the entire New Testament. Suppose you want to use The New Testament in Modern English by J. B. Phillips. I doubt you’ll find an exhaustive concordance in print for this translation. With your PDA or smartphone, select the translation, go to the search window, type in the word “faith,” choose the “Exact” option again, and search. A split second later you have 304 results. You can read through all of these in sequence, scan the list and find the results that pertain to the aspect of faith you are looking for, or try another search that is more limited. Suppose you want to study the relationship between faith and Christ. Type in both words and select as your search option “All Words Any Order.” You now have 51 results, all pertinent to what you are studying. It might take hours to do this with a printed concordance, and you’d be limited to the King James Version and a very few others.

Can you do this with Greek or Hebrew words? Yes, but you can also search using Strong’s numbers, which is often the best way to search in Hebrew and Greek since these languages are highly inflected. In other words, a single word may appear in many different forms. Assuming you want to see every instance of a Greek or Hebrew word, regardless of its form, just use KJV Strongs or NASB Strongs; find the Strong’s number of the word you want to search for by going to a verse that contains it and toggling the numbers on (if they are not already on); type that number into the search window; and immediately you have the results you’re looking for.

Although printed concordances are wonderful tools in their own right, none of them enables you to do everything that I’ve just mentioned, and I’ve only pointed out a few of the options possible. Moreover, your electronic Bibles, which automatically come with all these search capabilities and more, enable you to do in seconds what may take hours with printed Bibles and a printed concordance. One more very important advantage to the electronic medium is this: all these Bibles and concordances fit in the palm of your hand or, when you’re not using them, in your pocket. Wow!

For additional suggestions on Bible searches, see “The Why and How of Bible Searches” in Olive Tree’s article series Explore the Bible on Your PDA or Smartphone.

Torrey’s Topical Textbook Available for Your PDA or Smartphone

Topical study, though only one of many fruitful Bible study methods, is among the best ways to enrich our understanding and enjoyment of the Scriptures. To read as much as you can of what God has to say on a biblical subject is well worth the investment in time and effort.

One of the most helpful tools in this regard is Torrey’s New Topical Textbook, which brings together in simple outline form the major Bible passages on hundreds of important topics. Using this tool on your handheld device enables you to have a second window open for viewing the verses as you explore a topic. I am very glad to have this rich source of topically organized Bible references on my PDA, and I have begun to enjoy the blessing of spending an evening exploring a subject like Sanctification, Sin, the Blood of Christ, Grace, Redemption - there are hundreds to choose from.

To read Torrey’s inspiring introduction to this work is to be infused with desire to dig into God’s word. “The topical method of Bible study,” he says, “is simplest, most fascinating, and yields the largest results . . . It was Mr. Moody’s favorite method. It fills one’s mind very full on any subject studied. Mr Moody once gave several days to the study of ‘Grace.’ When he had finished he was so full of the subject that he rushed out on the street and going up to the first man he met he said: ‘Do you know anything about Grace?’ ‘Grace who,’ the man asked. ‘The Grace of God that bringeth salvation.’ And then Mr. Moody poured out upon that man the rich treasures he had dug out of the Word of God.”

Torrey goes on to say, “That is the way to master any subject and get full of it. Go through the Bible and see what it has to say on this subject.” This is made easy by having Torrey’s topical study tool on your PDA or Smartphone. That which at one time would have taken days or even months to accomplish can be done in a few hours of concentrated reading and study. What a blessing it is to have Torrey’s New Topical Textbook to aid us in understanding the truth and coming to know the Person and Work of Christ revealed in the Bible!

Exciting New Features On Symbian Series 60 BibleReader

New Symbian Verse ChooserWe just put up a new Symbian Series 60 beta with some cool new features! The features I am the most excited about are the ones that make navigating and accessing common functions faster. We completely redid verse navigation. Verse navigation is now done by using the 5-way navigator to select the book, chapter, and verse from a table. This makes navigating to a verse much easier. We also reorganized the menu to make it easier and quicker to access the menu items. To make accessing common functions even faster we removed the necessity of using the menu. You can assign shortcuts to keys on your phone with the new shortcut options. For example, on my Symbian phone I assigned the center key to bring up the verse chooser. Using this shortcut with the new verse chooser makes getting to verses effortless.

Shortcuts aren’t the only options we added. This new BibleReader now has scrolling options, font options, and color options for customizing how each window looks.

We also added support for a number of commentaries and Christian Writings. You can now read Matthew Henry’s Commentary, Jamieson Faucett and Brown Commentary (JFB), New Scofield Bible Notes, and Grudem’s Systematic Theology on your Symbian Series 60 phone.

You can download this beta BibleReader here.

Enjoy!

Stephen

A Newer, Friendlier Verse Chooser

You may have noticed that Olive Tree’s BibleReader now has a new verse chooser. Perhaps you’re wondering why we spent the time to completely recreate this function? In this blog, I’d like to tell you why and let you know about the newer, friendlier verse chooser functions.

As Olive Tree developers, we realize that the verse chooser is one of the most accessed screens in the BibleReader, second in importance only to the main screen that displays the text. So we wanted to make the experience of using the verse chooser the best we could make it. To accomplish this goal we added a number of features to the verse chooser and designed it to work across platforms. Those that have used earlier versions of BibleReader on more than one platform (BlackBerry excluded) have probably noticed that the same pdb files work on the different platforms we support and that the display appears exactly the same. The main screen of the BibleReader is identicle on Palm, Pocket PC, Smartphone, and Symbian; therefore, when we add a feature to the main screen on one platform, it works on all of the other platforms. We wanted to do the same thing with the verse chooser.

One feature we have added is the ability to use the 5-way navigation button to select a verse. This is great for those who don’t like using their stylus and especially good for those whose devices don’t have a stylus. I personally find using the stylus to be distracting when I am in church, but now I can simply use the 5-way navigation button to change verses.

Another objective was to make the verse chooser give a better representation of what verses are actually referenced in a book. Although this feature is presently supported with new databases only, the verse chooser will now show you just the verses that are in the book and nothing else. The verse chooser also now shows introductions, prefaces, outlines, and the like. Formerly, verse 1 of chapter 1 would take you to the introduction for a Bible book, assuming an introduction was present. Now you can see in the verse chooser whether an introduction is present, and you can choose either to read it or to go directly to the verses.

Yet another feature we added was table of contents navigation. This feature works by letting you “browse” through a book’s table of contents to find where you want to go. This is great for non-versified works like Wayne Grudem’s Systematic Theology. We have even used this feature on a number of versified works. The Bible Knowledge Commentary has a very rich outline structure too. So we put this structure into the table of contents navigation. On versified material you can switch back and forth between verse mode and table of contents mode (or TOC). Having both modes gives you more flexibility for locating a passage of interest to you. (Once again these new features are only supported on newer databases.)

Finally one of the biggest advantages of the new verse chooser is that it is cross platform (except BlackBerry). This lets us add new features to all of our platforms much more easily. Right now this verse chooser is in the Palm and Pocket PC release BibleReaders and the Smartphone beta reader. We are currently working on “hooking it up” in the Symbian BibleReaders. This means that Smartphone users can now use works like Grudem’s Systematic Theology, the New Scofield Bible Study Notes, the Ryrie Study Bible Notes, and the Bible Knowledge Commentary. With minimal work we were able to get this rich verse chooser working on Smartphone. I hope you will enjoy the many benefits of this new verse chooser as you use it for reading and studying your Bibles and other tools.  

 

A New Addition to Olive Tree’s “Explore the Bible” Article Series

We want to call your attention to an ongoing series of articles from Olive Tree called Explore the Bible on your PDA or Smartphone. These articles have been coming out for a few months now; there are nine to date, and a tenth coming soon. You may read these articles at olivetree.com or download them at no charge to your handheld computing device. The purpose of the articles is to help our customers get the most out of their electronic Bibles and Bible study software by presenting examples of real Bible study using Olive Tree Bibles and tools. A second, but not secondary, purpose is to nurture in readers a love and respect for the Bible and its message. Articles address such topics as The Blessings of Daily Scripture Reading, Using Cross References to Let the Bible Speak for Itself, The Why and How of Bible Searches, and Meditating on God’s Word. Some of the articles include helpful screen shots to assist readers.
 

The newest article, released today for reading online, will be ready to download to your device in a few days. It is entitled Appreciating Greek with Wuest’s Translation. Kenneth S. Wuest’s New Testament: an Expanded Translation is unlike any other translation I know. Olive Tree is delighted to be able to provide this outstanding tool to our users. We like it so much that we have devoted an entire article to explaining how the translation works.
 

The Expanded Translation is a bold attempt by a noted Greek professor and scholar to render a more precise sense of the original by using as many English words as are necessary to convey the New Testament writers’ intended meaning; hence, it is an “expanded” translation, not, strictly speaking, a paraphrase. Greek students will immediately recognize echoes of the principles of Greek they learned in their study of the New Testament language. In fact, reading Wuest’s translation is like taking a refresher course on what makes Greek Greek and not English. Non-Greek-readers will be pleased to find a translation that lets them in on Greek patterns of thought and discourse without the need to actually learn Greek. This was exactly the translator’s desire: he wanted to share the richness of the Greek New Testament with those who might not have the opportunity to learn the language themselves. He intended that his translation would complement other fine translations and would be a window into Greek nuances that are difficult to render in English.
 

We hope you will enjoy this article, along with the other articles in our series; even the more, we recommend to you Wuest’s Expanded Translation itself for use on your PDA or smartphone. So that you will not be left without a taste of this unique translation, here are the familiar final verses of Romans 8 (verses 36-39) as Wuest translates them. Notice especially his treatment of the present tense, with its durative force, and the perfect tense to show completed action:
 

“Even as it stands written, For your sake we are being put to death all the day long. We were accounted as sheep destined for slaughter. But in these things, all of them, we are coming off constantly with more than the victory through the One who loved us. For I have come through a process of persuasion to the settled conclusion that neither death nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things about to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing will be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
 

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