The Bible Tutor produced
by Luther Seminary in Saint Paul Minnesota is a great tool for religion
teachers. The online version gives a basic introduction providing
information pages for books (the deutero-canonical books
are even included), people, places, dates, and other items
in the Bible. Handy CD-ROM version which contains both the
online version and an advanced version. I have not seen the latter,
but I suspect that if the quality of the work is as high as that
of the online version, it would be a worthwhile educational tool.
The Book of Jesus:
Dennis F. McCorkle has built a web site which I have found helpful
in the past. He has broken down the parts of the Gospels into
smaller sections and written them in a narrative form, with narrator
and characters clearly identified. This is an ideal format for
a dramatic reading of a text done by several students.
The Bible and Interpretation
- The intro to this web site reads thus: "Dedicated to delivering
the latest news, features, editorials, commentary, archeological
interpretation and excavations relevant to the study of the Bible
for the public and biblical scholars." If you share my fascination
for biblical archeology and the light it sheds to better help
understand Scriptures, you will enjoy this web site.