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BBN: Update on my Progress

kathleenmariekg

Active Member
I am on my third BBN course. I really enjoyed the first two classes, but the one I am taking right now is painful for me, though.

I loved 10500 Dispensational Theology. I took it slow and took lots of notes. The information is organized and presented in a fairly consistent manner, and things that I wanted to write down were said slowly and more than once. I want to take everything that this professor teaches! Final Grade 100%

10600 Doctrine of the New Birth is solid and there are no surprises. I am neutral to positive about further classes with this professor. Final Grade 100%

00100 Foundational Beliefs should be the easiest, but it is NOT for me. The presentation of information is rapid. I am overwhelmed. If this information was not review, and if this were not my third course, I would be tempted to drop BBN instead of resolving to power through. My anxiety climbs every second that I listening. I just want this to be over. I know I sound ungrateful. I know that taking any complete program includes lessons and courses that feel like this. I am just going to put in a reasonable effort, and allow myself lower grades instead of endlessly rewinding and rewinding and rewinding. Quiz 1 was a 93%. There are 7 more quizzes and the final exam to go. I have to keep this moving, and stay focused on the bigger picture.
 

kathleenmariekg

Active Member
I did another lesson and it went a little easier. The professor actually chastised the audience if we were doing what I have resorted to doing. He actually slowed down enough to discuss something that I understood enough to disagree with.

I see that the main topic of this 2nd lesson is expanded into an entire minicourse later, so I am just going to make sure I pass and keep it moving.

It went easier, though. I can do this.
 

kathleenmariekg

Active Member
Ecclesiastes 12:12

12 And further, by these, my son, be admonished: of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh.

So very very true! This has been an important guiding scripture to me for a long time.

But at the same time, I am not in college right now, and won't be back in college until at least next fall. I still consider my primary occupation to be "student" and see the lack of funding for my secular education as an opportunity to take some Bible courses. I don't know where God is going with all this, but it is going somewhere.
 

church mouse guy

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
12 And further, by these, my son, be admonished: of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh.

So very very true! This has been an important guiding scripture to me for a long time.

But at the same time, I am not in college right now, and won't be back in college until at least next fall. I still consider my primary occupation to be "student" and see the lack of funding for my secular education as an opportunity to take some Bible courses. I don't know where God is going with all this, but it is going somewhere.

It’s easier when you are young. My eyes ain’t much good anymore and I seldom read much more than articles. I sometimes think that I am approaching the little sleep before the big sleep. My car was making a terrible noise the other day so I took it to the shop. The mechanic said he found the problem—it was a Barbara Streisand Christmas CD in the CD player....
 

kathleenmariekg

Active Member
LOL

I powered though another lesson. Three down and five to go. My scores are a steady 93 and I know I have not mastered the material, but that is good enough for this course.

I am been having terrible trouble with my eyes since just before I started college, but God used that to help me as much as it has harmed me. To be BOTH a "student" and "print disabled" gives students free access to digital textbooks and reference books that low income and community college students do not have general access to. One of the main reasons that I did so much better in my classes than my peers was that immediate access to supplements for the rushed classroom lectures and anemic assigned text.

At this time of year, I usually need to reregister for that access, and I don't know if I still qualify as a "student". I trust God to use opened and closed doors to funnel me where he wants me. A closed door forces us to do something different and sometimes that is an opportunity.

From a secular worldview, BBN is not accredited and inferior to a accredited institution. I have peace and enthusiasm for doing this right now, though.
 

kathleenmariekg

Active Member
KathleenMarie,
In another thread I quizzed Steven on his studies.

What is your plan for your studies?

I have had very little control over my life the past few years. God creates funnels that narrow my options to few or no choices. At the beginning of this process I was terrified and frustrated; now I trust that the process.

I am also curious about the endgame.

My imagination is never great enough to imagine what comes next. As I am about to make each new jump, people disbelieve that I can do it. God sets me up for these jumps with things that the secular world labels as worthless. I am being set for something, but I don't know what it is yet.

I am just confident that this is what I am supposed to be doing right now, and I have learned to trust my ability to discern what I am supposed to be doing even when everyone else thinks I am wrong. My favorite professors began to enjoy watching other professors pull their hair out at initial choices only to have to reward me for them later.

God has an imagination that is beyond what humans can imagine. He also has a sense of humor and a heart for the underdog. I often feel like I observe my life more than control it. People have told me that watching me is better than watching reality TV. Sigh. My intent is not to provide entertainment for people, but I guess I do.

I am going to throw myself at this course of study with everything that I have, until I am diverted to the next stage of the journey, whatever that is.
 

Yeshua1

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
LOL

I powered though another lesson. Three down and five to go. My scores are a steady 93 and I know I have not mastered the material, but that is good enough for this course.

I am been having terrible trouble with my eyes since just before I started college, but God used that to help me as much as it has harmed me. To be BOTH a "student" and "print disabled" gives students free access to digital textbooks and reference books that low income and community college students do not have general access to. One of the main reasons that I did so much better in my classes than my peers was that immediate access to supplements for the rushed classroom lectures and anemic assigned text.

At this time of year, I usually need to reregister for that access, and I don't know if I still qualify as a "student". I trust God to use opened and closed doors to funnel me where he wants me. A closed door forces us to do something different and sometimes that is an opportunity.

From a secular worldview, BBN is not accredited and inferior to a accredited institution. I have peace and enthusiasm for doing this right now, though.
Any [articular doctrine giving you the most trouble?
 

kathleenmariekg

Active Member
Any [articular doctrine giving you the most trouble?

The absolutes that "none" of Acts should be used for Doctrine and that the presence of the Epistles have made some things "unnecessary" and therefore they don't happen at all anymore. And quoting scripture that warns about tampering with a single book to include the entire library of the made-decided cannon.
 

Yeshua1

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
The absolutes that "none" of Acts should be used for Doctrine and that the presence of the Epistles have made some things "unnecessary" and therefore they don't happen at all anymore. And quoting scripture that warns about tampering with a single book to include the entire library of the made-decided cannon.
think best to view Acts as history of the Church, and not teaching doctrines as say Romans!
 

Just_Ahead

Active Member
km,
Do you keep a diary or notebook of personal activities and interests?
Not something you would show to others--but something for yourself.

Over the years, I have kept several personal notebooks. Sometimes I keep a different notebook for each interest area. My longest series consists of night sky observations from my backyard patio.

I have known some people who also maintain personal email inboxes--choosing to keep the email contents only for themselves. For these people, digital has its advantages.

However, I prefer paper notebooks. I like to watch my thoughts flow through my pen onto the paper. I also like to take my notebooks with me and read them in down times.

Currently, I maintain two bound paper notebooks, numbering the volumes and pages.
  • Day notebook (record of my day's activities, people I meet, and my nature and astronomy observations)
  • Worship journal (record of my time with God)
Other folks are different. But at my current age (71 years), this seems to work best.

When I reach the last page (page 184) in a notebook volume, I also commit myself to turning back to the first page and reading all the entries in that notebook. Then, I place that notebook volume in a drawer or box and set up the next notebook volume. And, sad to say, I have been known to tear out some pages in my notebooks. :Cautious

I also commit myself to keep my notebook volumes for a limited time--mostly two or three years. Then I go through and discard the old notebook volumes.

Now, I find my life changes as frequently as my notebook volumes change.
No one notices, except my dog.
 
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kathleenmariekg

Active Member
think best to view Acts as history of the Church, and not teaching doctrines as say Romans!

Yup, exactly as you said it, but not with the absolutes that the professor stated. God is not as small as some conservatives paint him.

km,
Do you keep a diary or notebook of personal activities and interests?

I move around too much to take much paper with me. Many of my moves were made with just what I could carry. Digital is not safe either: it can all disappear in one second, and it has.

Since I know I cannot keep anything, I try to live as fully as possible with what I have in the moment.
 

Dave G

Well-Known Member
I am on my third BBN course.
Kathleen,
Ultimately how you study God's word and what you decide to do in the process of that, is entirely up to you...

But speaking strictly for myself, one thing that I've noticed over the course of my own life since the Lord graciously got a hold of me with His word at the age of 12, was the importance of simply casting aside structured study courses and simply starting at Genesis, continuing on through Revelation and then beginning again. At times I would also start at Matthew and go through, and then alternate...
"Old Testament" and then "New"...
Then I would start studying separate epistles to get doctrine down, and then go back and study everything through again.

However:
At the end of the day, whatever you do, I wish you well...

May He bless your efforts with much wisdom, knowledge and more importantly, an understanding of Him and what he has done for you that is derived through His word;
An understanding that passes anything that you "thought" you knew before.:)
 
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kathleenmariekg

Active Member
Hardest thing for many to do is to apply what we learn!

Twice, I have been so confused that I stopped calling myself a Christian. People can judge me for that, but they don't know what happened, and I let the father be the judge, and not the other children.

Both times it was a specific Baptist teaching about application that set things in motion so that I eventually found my way back. Baptist doctrines that state cautions and generalizations are critical for me to learn. Even in Baptist churches, controversial Baptist teachings are often skipped, even one-on-one when a parishioner is desperately faith-shatteringly confused and tearfully begging for clarification. I can imagine that teachers who have seen the results of the abandonment of these teachings will be prone to state absolutes. God is bigger than man-made absolutes, though. No matter how bad something is, swinging too hard the other way could be just as bad.

Many a parent has resorted to telling a 3 year old. "Don't touch the stove! Never, never, NEVER touch the stove!!!!" But at some point, that 3 year is going to grow up and need to be aware that some grownups sometimes need to touch certain parts of the stove.

I understand, but do not agree with some of the absolutes that this unnamed teacher is stating in the course that I am taking.
 

Yeshua1

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Twice, I have been so confused that I stopped calling myself a Christian. People can judge me for that, but they don't know what happened, and I let the father be the judge, and not the other children.

Both times it was a specific Baptist teaching about application that set things in motion so that I eventually found my way back. Baptist doctrines that state cautions and generalizations are critical for me to learn. Even in Baptist churches, controversial Baptist teachings are often skipped, even one-on-one when a parishioner is desperately faith-shatteringly confused and tearfully begging for clarification. I can imagine that teachers who have seen the results of the abandonment of these teachings will be prone to state absolutes. God is bigger than man-made absolutes, though. No matter how bad something is, swinging too hard the other way could be just as bad.

Many a parent has resorted to telling a 3 year old. "Don't touch the stove! Never, never, NEVER touch the stove!!!!" But at some point, that 3 year is going to grow up and need to be aware that some grownups sometimes need to touch certain parts of the stove.

I understand, but do not agree with some of the absolutes that this unnamed teacher is stating in the course that I am taking.
What are some absolutes that he is teaching?
 
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