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Quiz about Out of Context
Quiz about Out of Context

Out of Context Trivia Quiz


It's possible to take Bible verses and smash them together to make something the Bible definitely didn't say. Normally, that's frowned upon... but sometimes the results are hilarious. The Good News Translation is (ab)used in this quiz.

A multiple-choice quiz by AcrylicInk. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
AcrylicInk
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
391,681
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Easy
Avg Score
8 / 10
Plays
699
Last 3 plays: mcpoorboy (6/10), Guest 111 (9/10), Guest 96 (6/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. 'Just then a rooster crowed and Peter remembered what Jesus had told him: What a magnificent young woman you are! How beautiful are your feet in sandals. The curve of your thighs is like the work of an artist.'

The first part of this mash-up is from the book of Matthew. Which romantic biblical book is the second part from?
Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. 'The servants came and saw that the doors were locked, but they only thought that the king was inside, relieving himself. Knock, and the door will be opened to you.'

I don't want the door to be opened if there's someone on the toilet behind it! Who said, 'Knock, and the door will be opened'?
Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. 'Then he found a jawbone of a donkey that had recently died. He reached down and picked it up, and killed a thousand men with it. In this way he will strengthen you, and you will be perfect and holy.'

These quotes are from two completely different parts of the Bible. Which Old Testament man killed people with a donkey's jawbone?

Answer: (One word beginning with S)
Question 4 of 10
4. 'Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep. Make the tent you live in larger; lengthen its ropes and strengthen the pegs!'

No, you don't need to cram all of your sheep in your tent! The beginning of this mash-up is from a parable that Jesus told. What is it called?
Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. 'Never say anything that isn't true. Have nothing to do with lies and misleading words. Everything I say is true; nothing is false or misleading.'

Honest. I promise. These three sentences are from the same biblical book. Which chapter and verse is the third sentence?
Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. 'Your word is a lamp to hit Jacob on the hip.'

Two verses from two different books have been smashed together to make something... new. Which books are they from?
Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. 'The Lord said to Noah, "Eat this scroll that I give you."'

Noah didn't actually have to eat a scroll. What did God really tell him to do in Genesis 7?
Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. 'Blind guides! You strain a fly out of your drink, but swallow a camel! All the people of Israel who were there fled when they heard their cry. They shouted, "Run! The earth might swallow us too!"'

Why did the Israelites run and shout?
Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. 'Then the Lord gave the donkey the power of speech, and it said to Balaam, "Stupid people will start being wise when wild donkeys are born tame."'

Two donkey verses have been slammed together here. Which of these is another biblical donkey quote?
Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. 'Then I saw a beast coming up out of the sea. It had ten horns and seven heads; on each of its horns there was a crown, and on each of its heads there was a name that was insulting to God. But his mother said, "No! His name is to be John."'

Which mother chose the name 'John'?
Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Nov 04 2024 : mcpoorboy: 6/10
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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. 'Just then a rooster crowed and Peter remembered what Jesus had told him: What a magnificent young woman you are! How beautiful are your feet in sandals. The curve of your thighs is like the work of an artist.' The first part of this mash-up is from the book of Matthew. Which romantic biblical book is the second part from?

Answer: Song of Songs

Peter and the crowing rooster are from Matthew 26:74-75. Jesus had been arrested and taken to the High Priest's house. Peter followed and waited in the courtyard outside. Some of the other people there claimed that Peter knew Jesus, but Peter denied it.

Matthew is in the New Testament, but Song of Songs is in the Old Testament. The book is a poem - it's a dialogue between a man and woman who were in love.
2. 'The servants came and saw that the doors were locked, but they only thought that the king was inside, relieving himself. Knock, and the door will be opened to you.' I don't want the door to be opened if there's someone on the toilet behind it! Who said, 'Knock, and the door will be opened'?

Answer: Jesus

Matthew 7:7 is part of the Sermon on the Mount where Jesus taught to the crowds that gathered around him. The full verse reads, 'Ask, and you will receive; seek, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened to you.' The quote is often referred to in relation to prosperity theology: if someone prays for material things like a new car or lots of money, God will give it to them. It's a perfect example of how one sentence can be taken out of context. Earlier in the sermon, in Matthew 6, Jesus says 'Do not store up riches for yourself here on earth' (verse 19) and 'You cannot serve both God and money' (verse 24).

The story about a king locked in a room is from Judges 3:24. The king of Moab was assassinated by an Israelite judge, who secretly stabbed him and locked him in a room.
3. 'Then he found a jawbone of a donkey that had recently died. He reached down and picked it up, and killed a thousand men with it. In this way he will strengthen you, and you will be perfect and holy.' These quotes are from two completely different parts of the Bible. Which Old Testament man killed people with a donkey's jawbone?

Answer: Samson

'He' in Judges 15:15 refers to Samson, who killed a thousand people with a donkey's jawbone when he was about to be handed over to the Philistines. 'In this way he will strengthen you, and you will be perfect and holy' is from 1 Thessalonians 3:13. It is almost a complete contrast to Samson's story.

The record of Samson's life is full of violence and revenge, but the message at the end of 1 Thessalonians 3 is about love for all people.
4. 'Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep. Make the tent you live in larger; lengthen its ropes and strengthen the pegs!' No, you don't need to cram all of your sheep in your tent! The beginning of this mash-up is from a parable that Jesus told. What is it called?

Answer: The Lost Sheep

'Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep and loses one of them,' Jesus says in Luke 15:4. He doesn't say build a bigger tent for them. Instead, he compares the joy of finding one lost sheep to the joy experienced 'over one sinner who repents' (Luke 15:7). Making a larger tent is part of a metaphor in the beginning of Isaiah 54: God's people should prepare for more people to join the family.

The tent-dwellers in the Bible would have had homes made of animal skins.
5. 'Never say anything that isn't true. Have nothing to do with lies and misleading words. Everything I say is true; nothing is false or misleading.' Honest. I promise. These three sentences are from the same biblical book. Which chapter and verse is the third sentence?

Answer: Proverbs 8:8

There's a lot of 'Very truly I tell you' and 'I am telling the truth' in the Bible, but that doesn't mean it can be tacked on to the end of any old quote. The book of Proverbs is often associated with King Solomon, but there are also proverbs attributed to 'the wise'. Some scholars think that the text was edited and other writers contributed to it long after Solomon had died.

Individual verses from Proverbs are arguably the only part of the Bible that can be read and fully understood in isolation. They include wise sayings like, 'Plan carefully what you do, and whatever you do will turn out right' (4.26) and 'Wisdom can make your life pleasant and lead you safely through it' (3.17). 'Never say anything that isn't true. Have nothing to do with lies and misleading words' is Proverbs 4:24. Wise words.
6. 'Your word is a lamp to hit Jacob on the hip.' Two verses from two different books have been smashed together to make something... new. Which books are they from?

Answer: Psalms and Genesis

'Your word is a lamp to' is actually followed by 'guide me and a light for my path'. Psalm 119 doesn't mention anything about hitting people on the hip. In Genesis 32, however, a man wrestled with Jacob during the night. Jacob was winning, so the man hit him on the hip and 'it was thrown out of joint'.

This is the story in which Jacob is given the name 'Israel', and he says, 'I have seen God face-to-face'.
7. 'The Lord said to Noah, "Eat this scroll that I give you."' Noah didn't actually have to eat a scroll. What did God really tell him to do in Genesis 7?

Answer: Go into the boat with your whole family.

In Genesis 7:1, God told Noah to 'Go into the boat with your whole family', giving the following reason: 'I have found that you are the only one in all the world who does what is right.' The snake was told to eat dirt in Genesis 3:14, and Jonah was told to go to Nineveh in Jonah 1:2. Moses was told to take off his sandals in Exodus 3:5 when he saw the burning bush.

Eating a scroll sounds bizarre, but it's an instruction that God gave to Ezekiel. Ezekiel 3:1 says, 'God said, "Mortal man, eat this scroll; then go and speak to the people of Israel."' In verse 2, Ezekiel opens his mouth and eats it, albeit in a vision. Really eating a scroll would be a little peculiar to say the least - context is everything!
8. 'Blind guides! You strain a fly out of your drink, but swallow a camel! All the people of Israel who were there fled when they heard their cry. They shouted, "Run! The earth might swallow us too!"' Why did the Israelites run and shout?

Answer: The ground had opened up and swallowed people who had rejected God.

Jesus was condemning the Pharisees' hypocritical practices in Matthew 23:24. He was criticising the shallow way they followed the Law to the letter, focusing on minute details, but failing to grasp the underlying purpose of their practice. Jesus used hyperbole to highlight his point. Both flies and camels were considered unclean (so neither could be eaten), but while the Pharisees were busy perfecting the small things, they weren't addressing the larger problems.

The people running and shouting lived centuries before Jesus was born. While Moses and the Israelites were wandering around the desert, a group of them complained about their current situation. The ground opened up and swallowed the rebels. The other people who were there started to panic that the same would happen to them.
9. 'Then the Lord gave the donkey the power of speech, and it said to Balaam, "Stupid people will start being wise when wild donkeys are born tame."' Two donkey verses have been slammed together here. Which of these is another biblical donkey quote?

Answer: She was filled with lust for oversexed men who had all the lustfulness of donkeys or stallions.

Balaam's donkey started speaking to him in Numbers 22. The donkey didn't offer philosophical thoughts; it actually said, 'What have I done to you? Why have you beaten me these three times?' The two of them had an argument - which the donkey won. The 'wise' saying is from Job 11:12. Job's friend Zophar tried to comfort and answer Job's questions about suffering. 'She was filled with lust ...' is verse 20 in a prophecy God gave to Ezekiel in Ezekiel 23 (Good News Bible wording), when he and other Judeans were living in exile.

The prophecy was a metaphor about two sisters who represented Samaria and Jerusalem.
10. 'Then I saw a beast coming up out of the sea. It had ten horns and seven heads; on each of its horns there was a crown, and on each of its heads there was a name that was insulting to God. But his mother said, "No! His name is to be John."' Which mother chose the name 'John'?

Answer: Elizabeth

You've probably already guessed the beast's name wasn't John. When they took him to the temple to be circumcised, John was going to be called Zechariah after his father. In Luke 1:60, Elizabeth told them that his name was actually John, as the angel had told Zechariah in Luke 1:13.

The baby grew up to be John the Baptist. The terrifying beast with multiple heads is from Revelation 13, but the Bible doesn't say what his mother called him. He looked like a leopard, so let's called him 'Spot' for now.
Source: Author AcrylicInk

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor looney_tunes before going online.
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