The Columbus Dispatch

New museum has Bible covered from front to back

- By Adelle M. Banks

WASHINGTON — In the new Museum of the Bible is a room full of Bibles, color-coded to show the more than 2,000 languages into which the holy book has been at least partially translated — and the similar number for which translatio­n has “not yet begun.”

That exhibit is just one example of how the 430,000-square-foot building with a view of the U.S. Capitol is meant to fascinate, educate and — depending on your perspectiv­e — evangelize.

“You could certainly interpret it that way,” said Museum of the Bible President Cary Summers of the language-related exhibit in an interview shortly before the museum’s private gala opening Friday. listings to or call

Some may see the exhibit as a visual depiction of the Bible’s growing influence over time, and others as a demonstrat­ion of the potential for spreading its message further. “We’ve never viewed it as evangelica­l outreach at all. It’s just part of the history of the Bible. And we’re showing it in this great way.”

Since the nonprofit behind the museum was establishe­d in 2010, officials have shifted from their original mission “to inspire confidence in the absolute authority and reliabilit­y of the Bible” to one that’s become “nonsectari­an” and aimed at welcoming people of all faiths and none.

Strategica­lly located two blocks from the National Mall — a collection of monuments and museums dedicated to the country’s civic ideals — this Museum of the Bible is focused on religious ideals. Its success will, perhaps more than that of other museums, depend on the eye of the beholder. Visitors who swipe its high-tech screens or eat in its Manna restaurant will judge its contents from their own perspectiv­es — religious, Christian or evangelica­l, or none of the above.

The museum opens amid controvers­y around its message and its primary funders, Steve Green and his evangelica­l family, who also run the Hobby Lobby craft store business that three years ago won a much-debated court case giving it an exemption from the contracept­ion mandate of the Affordable Care Act. Hobby Lobby recently reached a legal settlement over some of its acquisitio­n of artifacts.

Separately, museum officials say they have responded to critics about the museum’s planned contents and language, adding nuance to signage and switching out artifacts to include a wider representa­tion of cultures drawn to the Bible.

The museum’s front entrance features a gateway with two 40-foot brass replicas of the Book of Genesis as it appeared in the Gutenberg Bible, the version that first brought the holy book to the masses in the 1400s. Just beyond these panels is a glass vestibule featuring an artistic rendering of Psalm 19 (“The heavens declare the glory of God”), inspired by the Bodmer Papyri fragment that is one of the oldest artifacts in the museum’s collection.

The spacious lobby features a 140-footlong digital ceiling with revolving images of landscapes, stained glass and items from the permanent collection.

Museum staff members will offer visitors heading to the three floors of central exhibits tablet-like digital guides to help them plan their trek based on their personal interests and the amount of time they have to spend in the museum that took three years and $500 million to build. Though the Green family contribute­d the bulk of the funding, smaller financial gifts have come from schoolchil­dren sending in a dollar a month as well as Catholics, Jews and atheists, Summers said.

Admission is free but donations are suggested. The museum is offering timed-entry passes but visitors can also attempt to enter without them.

Just above the lobby, the “Impact of the Bible” floor highlights how Scriptures have influenced cultures across the globe — from education and literature to art and architectu­re. A Bible owned by Elvis Presley is just steps away from mannequins adorned with dresses by fashion designers such as Dolce and Gabbana, who have featured icons of Mary in their luxury brand.

The eight-floor museum will display around 1,600 items in its permanent exhibits — about three-quarters of them Bibles and biblical manuscript­s. It also will feature separate temporary exhibition­s of collection­s of the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority, the Bible Lands Museum in Jerusalem and the Vatican.

Israeli officials are expected to join dignitarie­s ranging from congressio­nal chaplains to Catholic bishops for a private ribbon-cutting ceremony Friday before the museum opens for a ticketed gala affair. The musuem is set to open to the public Saturday.

Despite the fanfare, the museum opens in the shadow of a recent Justice Department settlement in which the Hobby Lobby company paid $3 million and returned 5,500 artifacts that were illegally imported from Iraq.

Museum of the Bible officials have tried to distance themselves from the controvers­y, saying the museum “was not a party to either the investigat­ion or the settlement.”

 ??  ?? The “World of Jesus of Nazareth” exhibit at the Museum of the Bible portrays what the city was like during the time of Christ. Dispatch.com/faith. Gatherings@dispatch. 614-461-5070. com
The “World of Jesus of Nazareth” exhibit at the Museum of the Bible portrays what the city was like during the time of Christ. Dispatch.com/faith. Gatherings@dispatch. 614-461-5070. com
 ?? PRESS] [OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA ?? The eight-floor, 430,000-square-foot Museum of the Bible cost $500 million to build. It is dedicated to the history, narrative and impact of the Bible, museum officials say.
PRESS] [OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA The eight-floor, 430,000-square-foot Museum of the Bible cost $500 million to build. It is dedicated to the history, narrative and impact of the Bible, museum officials say.

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