View Full Version : I'm Going to Read the Bible Out Loud, Beginning to End
HeyHomie
11-13-2010, 08:17 AM
A plot point in a movie I saw recently involves someone reciting the Bible from memory (King James Version, if it makes any difference).
Has such an experiment ever taken place? I don't mean the "from memory" part; obviously that would be impossible. But has anyone ever undertaken to read the Bible out loud, from beginning to end, just to see how long it would take? And if so, how long did it take?
My WAG is that if we assume the reader does it in 8-hour shifts, allowing time for lunch breaks, pee breaks, plenty of time to drink water as needed, etc., it could probably be done in two or three months. But I'm literally pulling that figure out of my ass.
Schnitte
11-13-2010, 09:00 AM
This page (http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_manywords_are_there_in_the_Bible) claims that an unnamed English translation of the Bible has a little short of 800,000 words. Given that it should be comfortably possible to pronounce an average of two words a second, reading out loud the entire text would take you a little more than 100 hours of net reading time. If you do eight hours a day (an assignment that should be easily feasible even allowing for ample breaks of the kind you describe), it's going to take you about two weeks.
By the way, I wouldn't be surprised to hear that there are people around who know the entire Bible by heart. Reciting the Quran from memory has a long tradition in Islamic religious education, so it can be done (OK, the Quran is considerably shorter than the Bible, but the idea obtains), and if it can be done there's most likely a sufficiently pious person somewhere to do it.
Sofis
11-13-2010, 09:13 AM
This guy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lu_Chao) memorized 100 000 digits of pi in a year. Given that it is much easier to memorize coherent natural language than a sequence of digits, memorizing the bible would be no problem for someone who really wanted to.
Slithy Tove
11-13-2010, 09:13 AM
Alexander Scourby (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Scourby) did it. You might recognize his voice (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rR2YsHAMuYU) from a lot of old TV commercials.
Clark Cello
11-13-2010, 09:44 AM
A plot point in a movie I saw recently involves someone reciting the Bible from memory (King James Version, if it makes any difference).
Has such an experiment ever taken place? I don't mean the "from memory" part; obviously that would be impossible. But has anyone ever undertaken to read the Bible out loud, from beginning to end, just to see how long it would take? And if so, how long did it take?
My WAG is that if we assume the reader does it in 8-hour shifts, allowing time for lunch breaks, pee breaks, plenty of time to drink water as needed, etc., it could probably be done in two or three months. But I'm literally pulling that figure out of my ass.
Not impossible, and, historically, not that uncommon to be able to recite the bible from memory.
gwendee
11-13-2010, 10:53 AM
The recording I have is (if I recall correctly) about 73 hours long.
If you did it in 8 hour shifts you wouldn't even need one month. I know everyone's different but I could not comfortably sustain reading aloud for 8 hours in one day.
When I read Shakespeare, or the KJV I often read aloud. I find it helps me stay focussed on the meaning rather than merely running my eyeballs over words. Even as little as one hour and I start to feel a tightness in my voice. I imagine people who have some sort of vocal training know how to avoid this.
I have a few different (pretty short) chapters that hold particular importance for me memorized, but cannot wrap my head around having a head clear enough to memorize the whole thing.
Teacake
11-13-2010, 06:19 PM
My partner and I have read the Bible aloud. Not because we're religious: we were travelling, living in a van, had no TV, knew before we left that we'd have a lot of time for reading and so took the kind of books we'd never had the time to read. Ulysses, that kind of thing. So anyway, we read the whole Bible aloud: it didn't take us very long to get through it, and we were only reading in the evenings for maybe between two and four hours. We started on 13th June and finished on 9th July (I just looked it up in our journal. So glad we kept that!).
Xavier Breath
11-13-2010, 09:33 PM
I actually did read the King James Bible aloud back in the early 1990s. It took a little over 2 weeks of 8 hours a day reading. Parts were really fun (the "begats" and Proverbs) and the New Testament really went by in a hurry.
Lumpy
11-13-2010, 09:37 PM
One Bible I used to own actually had a suggested guide for reading the whole thing in a year- x-number of chapters and verses a day.
One Bible I used to own actually had a suggested guide for reading the whole thing in a year- x-number of chapters and verses a day.
I have the 90 Day Bible--you read 12 pages a day, and have two missed days built in.
I actually did read the King James Bible aloud back in the early 1990s. It took a little over 2 weeks of 8 hours a day reading. Parts were really fun (the "begats" and Proverbs) and the New Testament really went by in a hurry.
Notable post/username mismatch. :p
cornflakes
11-14-2010, 01:17 PM
The Voice, reciting The Book. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GfmYvEL-_do&feature=&p=DE961F8C69811079&index=0&playnext=1)
prettydorky
11-14-2010, 01:24 PM
Not impossible, and, historically, not that uncommon to be able to recite the bible from memory.
The entire bible? I know that plenty of people know huuuge amounts of it, but to be able to recite even the completely useless verses from memory? Word for word? Historically not uncommon? Do you have a cite?
ZipperJJ
11-14-2010, 01:47 PM
I actually did read the King James Bible aloud back in the early 1990s. It took a little over 2 weeks of 8 hours a day reading. Parts were really fun (the "begats" and Proverbs) and the New Testament really went by in a hurry.
What were the circumstances that led to this?
dr_intrepid
11-15-2010, 12:46 AM
I have seen an evangelist who recited the entire book of Revelation from memory, and I have heard tell of other such men who could recite large portions from memory. Depending on how much oomph one would put into the performance, it should take about 70-75 hours. This would call for some intermissions between chapters.
iamnotbatman
11-15-2010, 01:30 AM
For the love of God, WHY???
oh
even sven
11-15-2010, 01:41 AM
The entire bible? I know that plenty of people know huuuge amounts of it, but to be able to recite even the completely useless verses from memory? Word for word? Historically not uncommon? Do you have a cite?
Before mass-produced books were widely available, actual physical (hand printed) Bible were fabulously expensive. So for lots of people, if you wanted to have access to the Bible you had to memorize it. Plenty of people- from backwood priests to the exceptionally devote- would have a good reason to memorize the Bible.
Memorizing a book is not exceptionally hard, although in this age we've lost the knack. I was surprised when I gave a test to my Chinese students, and they took their answers word-for-word from the absolutely useless textbook that we didn't even use in class. The poor kids had memorized the whole damn thing!
Elendil's Heir
11-15-2010, 09:42 AM
William Jennings Bryan, orator, three-time Presidential candidate, U.S. Secretary of State and courtroom foe of Clarence Darrow in the Scopes Monkey Trial, was said to have memorized vast chunks of the Bible (although not the entire thing, IIRC).
Mk VII
11-16-2010, 11:11 AM
" It often amazed me, and I am still unable to understand the fact, that my Father, through his long life--or until nearly the close of it--continued to take an eager pleasure in the text of the Bible. As I think I have already said, before he reached middle life, he had committed practically the whole of it to memory, and if started anywhere, even in a Minor Prophet, he could go on without a break as long as ever he was inclined for that exercise. "
Edmund Gosse, Father And Son
JFLuvly
11-16-2010, 11:41 AM
Here ya go, a friend of mine. I'm not sure if he finshed it yet or not.
http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=RoachWayne#g/u
cjepson
11-16-2010, 12:36 PM
But I'm literally pulling that figure out of my ass.
I hope no one else uses your keyboard.
Shodan
11-16-2010, 12:50 PM
According to Ripley's Believe It or Not, Rachel Macrimmon (http://books.google.com/books?id=pgxCWhreacIC&pg=PA133&lpg=PA133&dq=Ripley%27s+believe+it+or+not+memorize+entire+Bible&source=bl&ots=EBUGMhDhVv&sig=9Z75WI9U4boPG9mGflzs17F65d4&hl=en&ei=z9HiTNrWK8GOnwe186WjAw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false)memorized the entire Bible.
I don't know if that is a credible cite, or not.
Regards,
Shodan
CookingWithGas
11-16-2010, 01:55 PM
Just clocked in to say that the movie referenced by the OP "The Book of Eli" was a great movie. I tell my friends it is a combination of Mad Max, Kung Fu, Jesus Christ Superstar, and Fallout 3
Chief Pedant
11-16-2010, 05:27 PM
The entire bible? I know that plenty of people know huuuge amounts of it, but to be able to recite even the completely useless verses from memory? Word for word? Historically not uncommon? Do you have a cite?
I believe Jack van Impe (http://www.jvim.com/scripturememorization.htm) claims to have memorized right around half the Bible, including most of the New Testament. Specifically, he claims to have committed to memory about 14,000 verses out of the 31,000 or so in the non-Apocrypha versions.
Wendell Wagner
11-16-2010, 07:40 PM
Supposedly Kim Peek memorized many books and could recite from them from memory:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim_Peek
Mahaloth
11-16-2010, 08:16 PM
One Bible I used to own actually had a suggested guide for reading the whole thing in a year- x-number of chapters and verses a day.
Yeah, but that isn't really intended for out loud I don't think.
I believe Jack van Impe (http://www.jvim.com/scripturememorization.htm) claims to have memorized right around half the Bible, including most of the New Testament. Specifically, he claims to have committed to memory about 14,000 verses out of the 31,000 or so in the non-Apocrypha versions.
Yeah, he's one of the top people for having the Bible memorized. He has to practice a ton to keep it up, though.
Number
11-17-2010, 06:52 PM
For those unfamiliar with it, Librivox.org is a site where volunteers record free audio versions of public domain books. Their full renditions of the Old Testament (http://librivox.org/old-testament-world-english-bible/) and New Testament (http://librivox.org/world-english-bible-new-testament/) from the World English Bible run 58:02:02 and 19:20:46 respectively. So that's in line with the two-week estimate.
Baker
11-17-2010, 07:13 PM
The youth of the Episcopal diocese of Kansas have an annual reading of the entire Bible, out loud.
During a long-weekend in January they gather in Topeka, at the cathedral, for Miqra. It's a Hebrew word that I believe refers to reading the Scriptures out loud. Reading is done is one hour shifts. They start on Friday and end on Sunday, going all day and all night. While the reading is going on the youth have other events, Bible studies, youth forums, games, and so on.
spingears
11-19-2010, 04:44 PM
[QUOTE= I don't mean the "from memory" part; obviously that would be impossible. [/QUOTE]
Not impossible but requires special capability. People who can do such are savants. The can recite the value of Pi to a very large number of digits and similar feats. There are other normal people who can do similar things from memory. I knew a PhD scientist at a National Laboratory who read a lot of books and could recall specific information as well as the chapter, page #and paragraph. Do a search of the web for "savamts" and "Feats of Memory".
Chronos
11-19-2010, 06:31 PM
Not impossible but requires special capability. People who can do such are savants.Memorizing large bodies of text doesn't require that one be a savant; it merely requires dedication and time. The only reason it seems impossible to most folks is that most folks aren't willing to put in the time needed.
dhkendall
11-19-2010, 11:08 PM
I once saw, on one of those "Believe It Or Not" shows that there was a person who had memorized all of Stephen King's "It". The host asked an audience member to pick a page number, paragraph number, and sentence number, and the guest started with the text of the book at that point (the camera on the book to show he wasn't lying), even over the subsequent awed applause, until the host stopped him.
If that can be done with a Stephen King book (pretty big - I read it myself a few times and used to have it in my library - but I don't think as big as the Bible) I don't doubt it can be done with the Bible. Unlike the Bible, though, I think this guy is the only one who has that trick for that book.
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