QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT
Do not use these questions simply to "Mark Time." Let their message to you be--"Forward March." Interrogation, not statement, stirs the mind. The questions are framed to draw out the reader's knowledge and provoke discussion that will bring to light interesting points without consuming too much time.
Try the questions in this way: Select one of the following stories and read it. After the reading, ask the questions that bear on the story. By means of the subtitles and page numbers the desired questions may be readily found in the pages that follow. The whole family may join in this test and it will be doubly interesting if conducted as a game, such as the old-fashioned "spell-down."
Other stories than those here suggested may be chosen and used in the same way. Select from the titles any part of the Bible that you may wish for any particular reason,--its bearing on the Bible School lesson perhaps, its seasonal interest, or personal message,--you can find the text by means of the page reference. So using these questions you can make definite strides in knowledge of the Bible.
| Joseph in Egypt. | [96-108 H.T.] |
| Gideon. | [319-331 H.T.] |
| David and Goliath. | [386-394 H.T.] |
| The Story of the Flood. | [24-31 T.J.] |
| Esther. | [60-79 T.J.] |
| Samson. | [172-182 T.J.] |
| Daniel. | [183-190 T.J.] |
| Boyhood of Jesus. | [49-53 L.J.] |
| The Feeding of the Multitude. | [144-148 L.J.] |
| The Rich Young Man. | [211 L.J.], [212 L.J.] |
| The Raising of Lazarus from the Dead. | [215-220 L.J.] |