Interaction and Community with the Bible
There was a post at eBible's blog some time ago asking this question, but since there were not very many replies, I thought to bring it over here and ask the same.

What does it mean to study the Bible online together?
eBible framed this question in the vein of its Bible offerings, bookmarking, and notes features. But beyond just that, what would studying and reading the Bible mean if the boundaries of the page were eliminated? Meaning, what if some people were able to read in a web browser, others on paper and then compose notes online, others text and video blog about it, etc. What would that look like for creating communities that observe the Word?
And an even better question, could any of you whom are pastors pull something like this off with small groups in your churches as a means to keep them 'in the community' and not necessarily in the pew?

What does it mean to study the Bible online together?
eBible framed this question in the vein of its Bible offerings, bookmarking, and notes features. But beyond just that, what would studying and reading the Bible mean if the boundaries of the page were eliminated? Meaning, what if some people were able to read in a web browser, others on paper and then compose notes online, others text and video blog about it, etc. What would that look like for creating communities that observe the Word?
And an even better question, could any of you whom are pastors pull something like this off with small groups in your churches as a means to keep them 'in the community' and not necessarily in the pew?

















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