First full dyslexia-friendly Bible now finished
Milla Ling-Davies
The Bible Society has finished producing the Bible in a dyslexia-friendly format.
Beginning in 2015 with the publication of the book of Psalms and the Gospel of Mark, the resources were designed to enable those with the learning disorder to engage with Scripture ‘comfortably and confidently’. Now, following the publication of Deuteronomy and Joshua, all 66 books have been finished, and the project is complete.
All Scripture to be signed
Nicola Laver
A mammoth project to translate the Bible into British Sign Language (BSL) is underway. So far, the team at the BSL Bible Translation Project has translated ten chapters of Mark’s Gospel, while another team has started work on parts of Genesis.
More than 400 sign languages are in use around the world, but just one has a full Bible in its own language: the Bible in American Sign Language was completed in 2020 by Wycliffe Bible Translators – after 39 years in the making.
Do we have a theology of disability?
Kay Morgan-Gurr
We love theology in the evangelical church. We want to know what God says about all sorts of things in the Bible. We soak in what those who have studied theology say, and sometimes we study it ourselves with the books that we read and the podcasts we listen to.
But do we, as evangelicals, have a theology of disability?
Disability History Month: The dark and hidden past of disability
It’s Disability History Month. This has happened every year from 16th November to 16th December since 2010.
Has your church ever done events around this, in the same way many do events around Black History Month?