


I would recommend the NLT more for reading than study because it is a ‘thought for thought’ translation rather than a ‘literal’ translation, but as a reading Bible the NLT is great and it serves the purpose and the audience of this Bible well.įeatures include a special presentation page, purple ribbon marker, designer page edges, memory verses, book introductions, timelines, charts, three-dimensional maps, and 16 pages of full-color illustrations about Biblical times. The New Living Translation is very readable. It contains bold pink headings within the text, which are really nice. I’m not sure, but it looks like maybe an 8 or 8.5 point font. The paper seems to have a slight pink tint. It has a very ‘girly’ purple and pink cover and the text has pink highlights throughout. The free review Bible I received from Tyndale is (roughly) 5.5 x 8.5 and is made from ‘leatherlike’ material.

There are many articles and charts throughout the Bible that pertain to important topics for girls. The Bible includes answers to tough questions about God, following Jesus, and loving others. The Girl’s Life Application Study Bible is written specifically for tweens and teens and contains notes and advice on life. Original Article April 30th, 2011 – Updated April 8th, 2017 New American Standard Bible 2020 (NASB).

"The truth was I had always tried to love God, and for all my love and God's love, I was really no better or worse than I'd been before." She seemed hurt that she couldn't take part in this Christian tradition.Īs an atheist ex-Catholic, I don't know much about evangelical culture, but I can tell you that Notess's debut collection of poetry, Ghost House, is a whole tapestry of testimony.NLT Large Print Thinline Filament Edition Bible in Olive Green Leather Review "Before my attempts to invite Jesus into my heart, I was actually less of a sinner than after the fact, having had less time to sin," she wrote. And the call came so early that she was a child before her life as a Christian began. She had been born into an evangelical family, so she had little temptation to rise from. In the introduction to the first (and to date only) anthology she ever edited, 2009's Jesus Girls: True Tales of Growing Up Female and Evangelical, local author Hannah Faith Notess complained about testifying: the evangelical need to tell the story of your fall and rise to Christ in a dramatic narrative.
