Bible Study In Amharic !!link!! Official
"May I… say something?" she asked, her voice barely a whisper.
They discussed the Greek Logos —the concept of the Word as reason, as divine plan. Selam listened, nodding. But inside, a quiet ache grew. The English words were correct, but they felt like flat stones. Her grandmother’s Amharic Bible had always felt like living water. bible study in amharic
Selam walked home that night under a cold, brilliant sky. The English Bible was still in her bag, but so was the Amharic one—open, alive, its pages no longer a museum but a mouth. "May I… say something
Selam reached into her bag. She had brought the Amharic Bible after all, though she hadn't planned to open it. She turned to John 1:14. The Amharic letters, like dancing teardrops and angular birds, stared back at her. But inside, a quiet ache grew
Then, the college student, a boy named Mark, stumbled. "I don't get it," he said. "What does it mean that the Word became flesh? Like… a dictionary becoming a person?"
That evening, she walked into Sarah’s living room. Seven people sat on couches with coffee mugs in hand. They were kind—a retired teacher, a young couple, a college student. They opened their English Bibles to the Gospel of John, chapter one.