
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Reading the Bible today is a very different proposition than it was in the 1st Century, as a little history and common sense makes clear. It has been rightly said that “a text out of context is a subtext for a pretext!” And, contrary to the opinion of some modern Christians, reading Sacred Scripture “in context” begins with the context for which it was written, namely, the Holy Liturgy.
By Matthew ArnoldReading the Bible today is a very different proposition than it was in the 1st Century, as a little history and common sense makes clear. It has been rightly said that “a text out of context is a subtext for a pretext!” And, contrary to the opinion of some modern Christians, reading Sacred Scripture “in context” begins with the context for which it was written, namely, the Holy Liturgy.