Voice in the Wilderness Bible [VW]

Voice in the Wilderness Bible – 2008, A [VW]

Voice in the Wilderness Bible

Summary of Voice in the Wilderness Bible [VW]

Masoretic Text, Textus Receptus. Edited 2003.




A Voice In The Wilderness Holy Scriptures is a translation of the Holy Bible by Paul Becker that is based on the Masoretic Text and the Textus Receptus. A literal translation to the extent possible, this translation renders most references to “the LORD” in the Old Testament (the tetragrammaton YHWH) as Jehovah, except in some of the Psalms where it uses the shortened form Yah. Another distinction between this translation and others tend to be in the area of word useage, such as “immersion” for baptism, “do homage” for worship, and “shofar” for trumpet. References to hell are rendered as Sheol in the Old Testament, and as Hades, Gehenna, and Tartarus in the New Testament. This translation also renders all references to James in the New Testament as Jacob, even so that the book of James is called the book of Jacob. First published on the Internet in 2003, there have been at least two updates since then, with the latest being in 2006.

I would consider this Bible a literal version which is seen by the care of the translator in trying to not introduce or repeat the bias in other Bibles such as the KJV.


T.R. Simmons A Systematic Study of Bible Doctrine is a Bible Doctrines book of 43 chapters. The author is (according to the Introduction) "systematic, Calvinistic, Baptist, and premillennial". I am offering this work in various formats:
PDF: Simmons A Systematic Study of Bible Doctrine.pdf
Microsoft Word DOCX: Simmons A Systematic Study of Bible Doctrine.docx
OpenOffice ODT: Simmons A Systematic Study of Bible Doctrine.odt
EPUB: Simmons A Systematic Study of Bible Doctrine.epub
theWord: Simmons A Systematic Study of Bible Doctrine.twm
eSword: Simmons A Systematic Study of Bible Doctrine.topx
MySword: Simmons A Systematic Study of Bible Doctrine.mybible

Voice in the Wilderness Bible [VW]

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Category:Mysw-bib-eng
Date:October 19, 2015


fam50 The Christian as a Worker
examines work, work ethics, and what the Bible commands Christians concerning work.
Excerpt: Since the creation of the human being, God has given men work to do. Even in the garden, their principal work was to dress and keep (guard) the garden, their source of food. So, God wants man to be occupied (to always work). There is a saying that “idle hands are the devil's workshop.” It is certain that people do not know how to handle prosperity. Just look at the sins people get into in their retirement. In God’s eyes, they dedicate their lives at that point to things without eternal value. God knows that if man focuses on surviving, on sustaining himself and family, etc. that he is less inclined to sin and get into idle vices. Psalms 128:2 For thou shalt eat the labor of thine hands: happy shalt thou be, and it shall be well with thee. There is nothing better than working hard and enjoying the fruit of your labors.
Read the Tract fam50 The Christian as a Worker.

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