How Egyptians Made the Paper Paul Wrote the Bible On | Drive Thru History with Dave Stotts
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 ม.ค. 2024
- How Egyptians Made Paper | Drive Thru History with Dave Stotts | Bible Backroads
Join Dave Stotts as he explores the history of Papyrus, its significance during the early church, and the craft of making it.
Want an on-demand curriculum to go along with all your favorite Drive Thru History shows? Check out: drivethruhistoryadventures.com
Dave is like the galloping gourmet of the good news. What a treasure.
Thanks Dave! Your videos are a great resource to add to the study of our history. Your videos continue to inspire a love and nurture a curiosity about history. I used Drive Thru History for many years when I was homeschooling my kids and now I am sharing your content with my grandkids. They are very young but it is never too soon to share our history with kids.
Thank you as always Dave. Keep sharing the Good News of the Gospel and the reliability of the Scriptures themselves. You are muçh appreciated and so is
Cold Water.
MARANATHA,
I made papyrus when I was a kid. Peeled & split papyrus reed, layered it and pounded it until the layers fused, dried it, and wrote on it. It took pencil marks OK, but the nib of fountain pens got caught in the ribby fibers.
Love the passion you have for making short documentary style videos
Thank you for posting the video clip about making papyrus.
Thanks for sharing, Dave!
So interesting!!😊
I like this!
same😃
Love these small educational Christian stories. Thank you
Informative and entertaining as always! Thanks, Dave!
Fascinating!! Just another tangible link to the Bible 🙏
Good one, Davey!
excellent...thanks Dave
Very interesting!
Good job. Love the series.
When do you do a drive to Egypt?
You made that look so easy 😉I’ll have to give it a try
Paper was made from various things, including material. And yes, at times, it was reused and copied over as well.
Great video! 👏🏼👏🏼
You should showcase how its like to write on it
I made papyrus when I was a kid. Peeled & split papyrus reed, layered it and pounded it until the layers fused, dried it, and wrote on it. It took pencil marks OK, but the nib of fountain pens got caught in the ribby fibers.
@@mahutwe9728 Yes, I guess a brush with ink works better. Also when I think of papyrus I think of something like an ancient scroll, like a parchment, a manuscript. Is it a wrong association or are they relates?
@@mihaifloares2503 It was a bit like trying to write on dried corn husk. The ancient scrolls the OT was written on were made of shin smoothed animal skin, kinda like writing on thin smooth leather or the skin of a tambourine. Not cooking parchment. You can still get sheets of vellum from craft & calligraphy suppliers.
I was taught that Galatians was written by someone with Paul dictating, except for the last part that Paul wrote himself, which began with the larger characters, and that he acknowledged those characters as his own.
Tom is still his camera, man!? I thought he lost Tom a long time ago in a hole in the holy lands. 😂😂
th-cam.com/video/C7l-XzUdzMc/w-d-xo.htmlsi=_3M59zKAMOKQ3AZe
They have the receipe for paper, but no plans, blueprints, or schematics for the pyramids. It doesn't add up.
"How Egyptians Made the Paper Paul Wrote the Bible On ..." -- LOL -- What kinda crap / garbage is this? Paul did not write the 'bible'.
He wrote at least four books in the New Testament. That's pretty substantial.
@@jancoley9051 I will grant you that Saul is / may be the alleged "author" of four (4) books, in that collection of books referred to as the 'Bible". So what!