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About the Author

F. LaGard Smith, Scholar-in-Residence for Christian Studies at Lipscomb University

Works by F. LaGard Smith

The Narrated Bible in Chronological Order (1984) 366 copies, 1 review
Meeting God in Quiet Places (1992) 162 copies, 1 review
Who Is My Brother? (1997) 145 copies
The cultural church (1992) 127 copies
When Choice Becomes God (1990) 92 copies, 1 review
Male Spiritual Leadership (1998) 42 copies, 1 review
The Daily Bible (NLT) (2019) 10 copies
Key, The 1 copy
From Soulmates to Bedmates 1 copy, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Smith, Frank LaGard
Other names
Smith, F. LaGard
Birthdate
1944-12-06
Gender
male
Organizations
Church of Christ
Short biography
F. LaGard Smith and son of pioneer gospel preacher Frank Lester Smith (1913-1977). F. LaGard was born in 1944 in Houston, Texas, thereafter living in Shawnee and Tulsa, Oklahoma, Lancaster, Texas, and Birmingham, Alabama, before heading off to college at Florida College, graduating from Willamette University with both an undergraduate and law degree.

Smith was a District Attorney for Malheur County, Oregon for three years, served as an administrator for the Oregon State Bar in Portland for a year, then spent 27 years teaching at Pepperdine University School of Law in Malibu, California, focusing on Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Trial Practice, and Law and Morality.

For five years, Smith was Scholar in Residence for Christian Studies at Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee, then taught for two years at Liberty University School of Law and for four years at Faulkner University's Jones School of Law in Montgomery, Alabama, before retiring to write full time.

Smith has written some 35 books--legal, social, doctrinal, and devotional. He is most widely known as the compiler and narrator of "The Daily Bible" (the NIV and NLT in chronological order). He and his wife Ruth live in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and, for several months a year, at their cottage in the English Cotswolds where he does much of his writing.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Houston, Texas, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Texas, USA

Members

Reviews

20 reviews
First sentence: In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.

When I found this one at a thrift store, I was super excited because I misread the copyright of the narrated notes by F. Lagard Smith for the copyright of the translation. For most of the world, "which" year for the NIV is a non-issue. There is a percentage for which it matters a great deal. NIV 84 forever! I partly jest. Still the NIV 84 is what I first read and loved. It is ALL the comfort and nostalgia I need. Have I show more moved on? Yes. Mostly. But don't ask me to gush about the NIV 2011.

This one is arranged into daily dated readings. It is single columns. Each day's reading is marked with a symbol. It is black letter. The font size was decent. It is, of course, chronological, that is what sets this one apart from other Bibles.

I first read the NARRATED BIBLE in 1997 or 1998. It was the second Bible I read cover to cover. I read the NARRATED Bible in three weeks--in between Christmas and the start of the next college semester--so mid January. I absolutely fell in love with F. Lagard Smith's narration. It was just a great experience all around. So I was happy to try to recreate that with this one. Same notes or narrations, different translation. It wasn't the same experience.
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This is perhaps my favorite devotional book ever! Smith has a way of taking the most ordinary things from his life in the Cotswolds, reflecting on them, and coming up with a spiritual lesson/devotional thought that is meaningful to his readers. I will be reading this one again. There are enough devotions to cover one month--or a little more on the shorter months! While the author worked with The Daily Bible and wrote other books, this appears to be the only devotional-type book he authored.
I HIGHLY recommend this book to anyone looking to read the entire Bible. Until I participated on a year long bible study, reading the NIV Bible according to the schedule laid out by F. LaGard Smith, I really didn't understand the overall chronology of The Old Testament and how the various history, law, wisdom, and major and minor prophet books in it fit together and related to one another. Smith's harmony of the gospels is also very enlightening, as is his use of the book of Acts as a guide show more to Paul's letters. Smith's commentaries along the way aren't exstensive enough for in depth study of any particular book, but they are helpful in understanding the order in which he guides you through the entire Bible. show less
The title here is a bit of a misnomer, this Bible is not authored by F. LaGard Smith. The translation is the very readable New International Version, but instead of the usual canonical arrangement of books, Smith has arranged the books and passages in Chronological/Historical Order. He also wrote introductions and commentaries based on the historical events portrayed in the passages.

Some of my hard core theologian friends poo-poo this Bible, but I enjoy it.

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Statistics

Works
49
Members
2,819
Popularity
#9,097
Rating
3.9
Reviews
17
ISBNs
78
Languages
2

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