Google reader and blogging the Didache

So I have just switched from bloglines to Google reader for reading various blogs and I appreciate Google’s format a lot more. You can even read posts I felt worthy of sharing here; mostly they’re interesting biblical studies discussions and resources, generally related to Christianity and culture, or just funny.

Anyway, through catching up on my biblioblog reading, I discovered that ricoblog is doing an interesting blogging series on the Didache. He is translating, doing a phrasing breakdown, and even leaving a little commentary on each chapter. I have developed a distinct interest in the Didache of late and I’m happy to see so much time and effort spent on it in the blogging world.

2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. Pat, welcome to Google Reader. I’ve been a fan for a few months now. You’ve turned me on to the shared posts tool. I’ve not used it before. Maybe I’ll give it a try.

    Also, thanks for the link to ricoblog’s Didache series. I should think about doing something similar for Ephesians. I wonder how he got the Greek font into his posts. Any idea?

  2. Patrick George McCullough

    It would be great to see you do the same for Ephesians. About the Greek. I have just copied and pasted from Logos in the past, but I don’t think it looked as nice as his does. I notice in his page source that he has a blockquote class called “greek” tagged before each one. I don’t really know what that means.

    Rick Brannan, the man behind ricoblog, is an “Information Architect” at Logos Bible Software, so I’m sure he knows tons more than the two of us could ever hope to (or want to) know about Greek text on computers. Maybe you should shoot him a note.

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