Audio CD(Unabridged)

$39.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Uncover the mysteries of the Bible with bestselling children’s author Amy Parker and apologist Doug Powell as they team up to answer some of the biggest questions kids have about the Bible and theology.

The Big Book of Bible Questions addresses kids’ toughest Bible questions with theologically sound answers in a way that is relatable and engaging. It’s filled with fun facts, debunking of common misconceptions, and explanations of biblical and theological concepts. With eye-catching illustrations and real-life photos, this book will not only answer a kid’s Bible questions big and small, but it will also encourage spiritual conversations and a lifelong love of learning about the glory and wonder of faith, the Bible, and God.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781690585749
Publisher: Dreamscape Media
Publication date: 04/07/2020
Edition description: Unabridged
Product dimensions: 6.04(w) x 5.04(h) x 1.13(d)
Age Range: 7 - 15 Years

About the Author

Amy Parker is the bestselling author of over fifty books for children, teens, and adults, including A Night Night Prayer and the Christian Retailing's Best Award winners Firebird and Courageous Teens, which she co-authored. Her books have sold more than 1.5 million copies. A three-time Mom's Choice Award winner, she lives outside Nashville with her husband and their two sons.

Doug Powell is a Christian apologist, author, graphic designer, programmer, and recording artist. He has appeared on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, CNN, NPR, World Café, Prime Time America, and more. He is the author, designer, and programmer of the iWitness series of books and apps and the author/designer of the bestselling book The Holman QuickSource Guide to Christian Apologetics. He is also a contributor to The Apologetics Study Bible and The Apologetics Study Bible for Students.

Amy Parker is the bestselling author of over fifty books for children, teens, and adults, including A Night Night Prayer and the Christian Retailing's Best Award winners Firebird and Courageous Teens, which she co-authored. Her books have sold more than 1.5 million copies. A three-time Mom's Choice Award winner, she lives outside Nashville with her husband and their two sons.

Doug Powell is a Christian apologist, author, graphic designer, programmer, and recording artist. He has appeared on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, CNN, NPR, World Café, Prime Time America, and more. He is the author, designer, and programmer of the iWitness series of books and apps and the author/designer of the bestselling book The Holman QuickSource Guide to Christian Apologetics. He is also a contributor to The Apologetics Study Bible and The Apologetics Study Bible for Students.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Why Do We Have the Bible? Who Wrote It?

Although we are like God in some ways, in many important ways he is completely different from us. God is so different from us, so far beyond our understanding, that we couldn't know anything about him unless he told us. And that is just what he did in the Bible. He told some people about himself, and those people wrote it down for other people — including us!

We often talk about the Bible like it is one book. But really the Bible contains 66 different books! (The Old Testament has 39, and the New Testament has 27.)

The books of the Bible weren't all written at the same time. The oldest part of the Bible was written 1,500 years before the newest part. And the books weren't even all written in the same language. They were written in Hebrew, Greek, and a little bit of Aramaic. And it was written by about forty different people.

Some of these writers were very important people, like kings or people who gave advice to kings. Others were more common people, like fishermen, tax collectors, servants, worship leaders, priests, musicians, tent makers, and soldiers. These people lived in different parts of the world, from as far west as Egypt to as far east as Persia, where Iran is now.

Most of the Old Testament was written by prophets. The books that weren't written by prophets were most likely checked by the prophets to make sure that the written word spoke God's truths.

The New Testament was mostly written by the apostles. Like the prophets, these men were specially chosen by God to speak for him. All of the New Testament was written while at least one of the apostles was still alive.

But the real answer is that God himself wrote the Bible. The prophets and the apostles only wrote what God wanted them to say. And God gave them those messages — his messages for his people in the past, and for you and me today.

CHAPTER 2

Who Made God?

No one made God! God has always been alive and always will be alive. Nobody else is like that. He was alive before anything else because he made everything in the whole universe.

Where Is God?

Sometimes people say that God lives in heaven. But really, God is everywhere, which is sometimes called omnipresent. He is in the deepest cave, he is on the bottom of the ocean, he is farther away than we can see in space, and he is everywhere in between. There is nowhere — anywhere, ever! — that we could go where God is not already there.

CHAPTER 3

How Powerful Is God?

God is so powerful that he can do anything — anything — he wants to do! There is nothing you can imagine that is so big or so amazing that God could not do it. (Sometimes we use the word omnipotent, which means "all-powerful," to say this.) But that doesn't mean God will do absolutely anything. There are some things God won't do. That's not because he isn't powerful enough; it's because they are bad things. For example, God will never lie. He has the power to lie, but he is perfectly good, so he never wants to lie. God's goodness keeps him from using his power to do bad things. But his power is so huge that when he wants to do something, he is always able to do it. You know — like create the entire universe just by speaking.

How Smart Is God?

God is omniscient, which is another big word meaning that he knows everything there is to know. He knows the name of every animal. He knows the depths of the vastest galaxy. He knows the exact number and color and length of every single hair on your head. He knows it all because he made it all.

God knows everything that has ever happened and all the things that will ever happen. And even though the world has been around for a long, long time, he knows everything about how it has changed and how it will change in the future. That's because he decided what the changes would be and when they would happen. There is no question you could ask God that he couldn't answer!

CHAPTER 4

What Does God Look Like?

The Bible says that people were made in the image of God. That makes it sound like God might have eyes and ears and hands just like people do. And sometimes the Bible does talk about how God sees or hears things. Because we need eyes and ears to see and hear, we think of God having eyes and ears too.

But that's not really what "being made in God's image" means. It means we can think about things, make choices, make plans, and judge things, like God can. And it means we can even think about our own thoughts and understand right from wrong, which is why we are responsible for the choices we make.

God can do all these things without a body. How, exactly? Well, we don't really know for sure. God is a spirit, and a spirit is invisible. Still, God knows that is hard for us to understand, so he has appeared in different forms when he wanted to be seen. For example, God spoke to Moses for the first time in the form of a burning bush. But the most important way God made himself appear is when he took the form of a man. The Bible says that Jesus is the invisible God made visible.

CHAPTER 5

What Is a Miracle?

You've probably heard lots of things described as miracles — like an amazing play in a football game or when you finally clean your room. But a miracle isn't just when something unlikely happens. A miracle is when God acts in an unusual way to make something good happen that brings glory to himself.

Sometimes we think of miracles as when God interrupts the way the world works. But that sounds like God is only sometimes involved in the world.

The Bible says that God makes the world work the way it does and that he is always at work. But sometimes God works in a different way — a way that's uncommon to us — in order to display his power while doing something good.

In the Bible, God uses his miracles to carry out his plans. Often he uses miracles to prove that prophets and apostles have the authority to speak for God. Or God uses his power to save his people, like when he made water flow from a rock in the desert or food fall from the sky.

That's what makes miracles in the Bible different from the supposed miracles in other religions. In the Bible, miracles are God (not a prophet or other person) doing good things for his prophets or for his people. Other religions say they have miracles, but they're not really the same thing. They either don't do good or don't come from God or don't have a purpose at all. True miracles come from God and point us back to his glory.

CHAPTER 6

What Do Angels Look Like?

Angels are part of God's creation, but we can't see them unless God tells them to appear to us. When we can see them, they may look different to different people. Sometimes they look just like average humans, and people don't realize that they are angels. Sometimes they look like men, but their clothes are so white or bright that it is almost blinding. When they don't appear like normal humans, they usually scare the people who see them, and the angel has to tell them not to be afraid, even when he is bringing wonderful news. Even though they sometimes appear as men, that doesn't mean they look like men in heaven.

The Bible talks about two kinds of angels (but there may be more). One kind is called a cherub; another is a seraph. We see cherubim with a flaming sword guarding Eden after Adam and Eve were sent away. The Ark of the Covenant had two cherubim on the lid, and they are described as having faces and wings. Ezekiel had a vision where he saw hands under cherubim's wings. He also said they had four faces: one of a man, a lion, an eagle, and a cherub. Isaiah had a vision where he saw seraphim, another kind of angel. They seemed to look like men except they had six wings — two covering their faces, two covering their feet, and two to fly. Their voices shook heaven. The apostle John describes many of the same things in the book of Revelation. It may be that this is how angels really look, but it may also be that they are so different from anything we know that this was the best way to describe them so that we could understand.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "The Big Book of Bible Questions"
by .
Copyright © 2019 Amy Parker and Doug Powell.
Excerpted by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

A Letter to Readers, ix,
God, Faith, and the Bible,
1. Why Do We Have the Bible? Who Wrote It?, 2,
2. Who Made God? Where Is God?, 4,
3. How Powerful Is God? How Smart Is God?, 6,
4. What Does God Look Like?, 8,
5. What Is a Miracle?, 10,
6. What Do Angels Look Like?, 12,
7. What Is Faith?, 14,
8. What Is a Christian?, 16,
9. Why Do People Believe Different Things?, 18,
10. Why Does God Care about People?, 20,
Old Testament,
11. How Did All of Creation Happen in Six Days?, 24,
12. Why Did God Put Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden?, 26,
13. What Kind of Fruit Was on the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil?, 28,
14. Where Is the Garden of Eden?, 30,
15. Why Did Noah Build the Ark? How Big Was It? How Did He Build It?, 32,
16. Where Did Noah's Ark Land?, 34,
17. Why Did God Put a Rainbow in the Sky?, 36,
18. Why Did God Make a Promise to Abraham?, 38,
19. Why Were Joseph's Brothers So Mean to Him?, 40,
20. Why Did Moses' Mom Put Him in the River? Where Is the Nile?, 42,
21. Why Didn't Pharaoh Recognize Moses?, 44,
22. How Did the Israelites Walk through the Red Sea?, 46,
23. What's the Difference between Noah's Ark and the Ark of the Covenant?, 48,
24. How Tall Was Goliath?, 50,
25. How Old Was David? How Did He Beat Goliath?, 52,
26. Why Did God Make Solomon So Smart?, 54,
27. Why Did God Choose Esther to Save His People?, 56,
28. Why Did Haman Want to Hurt God's People?, 58,
29. What Are the Psalms?, 60,
30. What Is a Proverb? Who Wrote Proverbs?, 62,
31. Why Did Isaiah Tell about the Birth of Jesus?, 64,
32. Why Did Daniel Get Thrown into a Lions' Den?, 66,
33. How Many Lions Were in the Den? Where Was It?, 68,
34. Why Did a Fish Swallow Jonah?, 70,
35. Why Were There Prophets? Who Were They?, 72,
New Testament,
36. Why Did an Angel Visit Mary and Joseph?, 76,
37. Why Did Jesus Come to Earth?, 78,
38. Why Did Angels Appear When Jesus Was Born?, 80,
39. Who Were the Wise Men? Where Did They Come From?, 82,
40. How Many Brothers and Sisters Did Jesus Have? Did They Believe in Him?, 84,
41. What Did Jesus Look Like? What Was His House Like?, 86,
42. Why Was Jesus Baptized?, 88,
43. What Does Salvation Mean?, 90,
44. Why Did Jesus Have Apostles? Who Were They?, 92,
45. How Did Jesus Feed 5,000 People at One Time?, 94,
46. Why Did Jesus Walk on Water?, 96,
47. Is There a Right or Wrong Way to Pray?, 98,
48. Why Didn't Jesus Heal Everybody?, 100,
49. What Are Parables? Why Did Jesus Tell Them?, 102,
50. Who Is the Good Samaritan?, 104,
51. Why Didn't Some People Believe in Jesus?, 106,
52. Who Were the High Priests? Who Was Pilate?, 108,
53. Where Was the Cross? Why Wasn't Jesus' Dad There?, 110,
54. Why Didn't Jesus Get Down from the Cross?, 112,
55. Where Was Jesus While He Was Dead? Where Is Jesus Now?, 114,
56. What Happened to Jesus' Tomb?, 116,
57. Who Is the Holy Spirit? How Does the Holy Spirit Live in Me?, 118,
58. When Is Jesus Coming Back?, 120,
59. What Is Heaven Like?, 122,
60. What Are the "New Heaven and New Earth"?, 124,
Acknowledgments, 127,
About the Authors, 129,

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews