By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
Dixie Diva
The Bibles in hand
RIch Ronda new 0815
Ronda Rich

There are two Bibles that sit, always untouched, on the fireplace mantle in our living room. They are delicate and old, yellowed pages are falling from them, the black tabs denoting the different books mostly gone.

Should our house catch fire in the middle of the night, these two Bibles and Mama’s ancient red pin cushion are the material possessions that would mean the most for me to snatch away from harm.

They are Daddy’s Bibles and what they are and how they look says so much about him. Let me share a few things. They are both black.

Daddy firmly believed in only black Bibles and scoffed at any other color. When I was a kid, I had four different colors which, as absurd as this sounds, I coordinated to my dress each Sunday. Now, I even have one in hot pink, a gift from the wonderful folks at Zondervan when they published “What Southern Women Know About Faith.”

Daddy, though, stood firm in what he believed. He was black or white. They was nothing gray ever about him. “A Bible should always be black,” he lectured. “Because out of the darkness came the light.”

Both Bibles are King James. In his 78 years of life, he never read another version. While some argue that it is the hardest version to understand, it wasn’t to Daddy. With no more than an eighth grade education, he understood it plainly verse by verse, chapter by chapter, book by book. His language, like the King James, was poetic and beautiful to hear. It reminds me of reading where Harper Lee said that all writers should read the King James Bible because of the gift of its language.

These are Scofield Reference Bibles. Daddy lived and died by it, studying it daily for over 50 years. Cyrus Scofield, an American, dissected each scripture, explaining it carefully in footnotes. When Scofield’s reference Bible, published by Oxford University Press, first appeared in the early 20th century, it was considered quite innovative because, among other things, it had a cross reference system.

Neither Bible, though obviously well read, has one mark in it. Daddy fully believed that you didn’t mark up the Bible. He was much too reverent for that. We have Tink’s mother’s Bibles, too, and they are just as worn but hers have so much writing in them, you couldn’t get another word in. It is precious to see her thoughts written down and to be guided by her Godly wisdom.

Both Bibles were gifts to Daddy. I read the inscription from one longtime friend who had gifted the Bible to Daddy, four days after his son was saved at a church that Daddy once pastored. I chuckled as I read the hand-written note and said, “Everyone knew exactly what kind of Bible to buy Daddy — black, King James, Scofield reference.”

I’m not sure that Daddy ever bought himself a Bible. Maybe once when he was a young man. But for all the years I knew him, people gave him Bibles, always nice and expensive ones. It is fitting, I believe, that his favorite black King James Scofield came from a well-known moonshiner that he often bailed out of jail. You see, Daddy was a righteous man who rose up out of the mountain renegades. You never forget your people.

In one of the Bibles, Mama took it upon herself to write some family history in it. I was reading about grandparents and great-grandparents when I noticed the death date of my daddy’s father. He died in June, 1962 but Mama listed the date in JULY, 1962. This is how genealogies get all mixed up. One wrong date in a Bible and everything else falls into uncertainty. But, more than that, it’s pretty significant.

I am the rare possessor of a Bible that has an untruth in it.

Ronda Rich is the best-selling author of “What Southern Women Know.” Visit www.rondarich.com to sign up for her free weekly newsletter.

Know Your Neighbor: Inside the Life of MLB Champion Josh Reddick
Former Major League Baseball player, 2017 World Series champion
Josh Reddick Know Your Neighbor

(What you won’t find on social media … even if you’re approved as a friend)

  • Born: Savannah
  • Status: Married to wife, Jett; 6-year-old twin boys, Maverick and Ryder
  • Alma mater: South Effingham High School
  • What’s on TV: “NCIS,” “Dragon Ball Z”
  • Most spontaneous thing I’ve ever done: Drove to Nashville at 11 p.m. and got there at 8 a.m.
  • Most memorable home run or play in my career: A 2017 grand slam in my first game at Truist Park in Atlanta. As a Braves fan growing up, that was awesome. Also robbed Hunter Pence of a home run in 2019 in the ninth inning to save the game.
  • What I drive: 2017 Lamborghini Huracán with a Spider-Man wrap; 2024 Ford F-250 Super Duty
  • What I’m reading: Children’s books at night with my boys — mostly “Pokémon” right now.
  • Favorite movie: “The Count of Monte Cristo”
  • Actor who would play me in a movie: Seann William Scott
  • Toughest pitcher I ever faced: Tyler Clippard
  • App I can’t live without (no judgment): Amazon
  • Worst habit: Biting fingernails
  • My walk-up song: “Careless Whisper” by Wham!
  • On my office walls: Baseball memorabilia — my own and autographed items I gathered during my career
  • Favorite go-to comfort food: Grilled cheese
  • First thing I do in the morning: Brush my teeth
  • Pet I’d have if anything was possible: Penguin
  • Favorite MLB stadium: For the experience, Yankee Stadium; performance-based, Camden Yards in Baltimore
  • Most used emoji: 🤣
  • First job: Worked with my dad installing irrigation systems, landscaping, and mowing lawns
  • What I like about Effingham County: It’s my roots and where it all began for me. The people I’ve known and grew up with are a big part of me.
  • Snack I can never say no to: Chocolate or boiled peanuts
  • Favorite sports team: How ’bout them Dawgs?!
  • What song always gets me dancing (or singing): “Sunflower” by Post Malone and Swae Lee
  • Favorite value in others: Being genuine
  • Advice I’d give my teenage self: Ignore the haters. Don’t let them affect you in any way.
  • Talent I’d most like to have: Speak multiple languages
  • Dream date: Ruth’s Chris Steak House and then Topgolf — that’s our usual date night, and I love it.
  • Most ridiculous thing I believed as a kid: That I had to wait 30 minutes after eating to swim
  • Attribute I like best about myself: I tell it like it is.
  • And least: I speak when I sometimes shouldn’t.
  • My hero: Ken Griffey Jr.
  • My bucket list: Explore Alaska
  • My motto: “How can you hit the ball thinking of all the possible ways you can miss.”