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AgriLife Extension Releases Equine Herpesvirus Fact Sheet

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Updated, science-backed resource outlines symptoms, transmission and steps to reduce disease spread

Horse owners wanting to learn more about equine herpesviruses, EHV, now have a new fact sheet resource developed by the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service.

Equine Herpesvirus (EHV-1 and EHV-4): What Horse Owners Need to Know covers disease basics, how the virus spreads, recommended biosecurity practices to prevent spread as well as measures to report cases to the Texas Animal Health Commission

EHV-1 can cause respiratory illness, abortion in mares and, in some cases, lead to severe neurologic condition called equine herpesvirus myeloencephalopathy, EHM. EHV-4 primarily causes respiratory disease and rarely leads to abortion or neurologic signs, according to experts.

The fact sheet was compiled by Chelsie Huseman, Ph.D., AgriLife Extension horse specialist and associate professor; Jennifer Zoller, AgriLife Extension horse specialist and associate professor; and Tom Hairgrove, DVM, Ph.D., AgriLife Extension veterinary specialist, all in the Department of Animal Science.

“This resource provides an overview of EHV, preventative measures and reporting guidelines,” Zoller said. “The factsheet also has resources for developing a proactive biosecurity plan, which is the most effective way to prevent outbreaks.”

Transmission and prevention of EHV

Horse-to-horse contact is the most common transmission method, according to the factsheet. Aerosolized droplets produced when an infected horse coughs or snorts as well as contaminated equipment or surfaces can lead to spread.

 A new fact sheet from the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, Equine Herpesvirus (EHV-1 & EHV-4): What Horse Owners Need to Know, covers disease basics, how the virus spreads, recommended biosecurity practices to prevent spread as well as measures to report cases to the Texas Animal Health Commission. (Courtney Sacco/Texas A&M AgriLife)

“Common signs of respiratory disease include fever above 101.5 degrees, nasal discharge and coughing,” Hairgrove said. 

Experts stress that isolation is essential in limiting spread when returning from events or new arrivals for at least 14 to 21 days monitoring twice daily for fever and to handle those horses last during chores. Owners should also avoid sharing of tack, grooming tools or water sources.

Sanitize and clean stalls, trailers, buckets and other items. Also, limit personnel contact with multiple horses and wear dedicated clothing, gloves and boots when handling exposed animals. Wash hands thoroughly.

“We recommend following the guidance of your veterinary professional and animal health agencies for official guidance,” Hairgrove said.

Access the EHV fact sheet

Learn more about equine herpesvirus, how it spreads and what you can do to protect your horses. The full AgriLife Extension fact sheet includes symptoms, biosecurity steps and reporting instructions for Texas horse owners. 

DOWNLOAD THE FACT SHEET

Persimmons: One of The Easiest Fruit You Aren’t Growing

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ripe persimmon orange fruit in a basket
ripe persimmon orange fruit in a basket

If you grew up in East Texas, you probably learned one thing about persimmons the hard way: bite into the wrong one, and your mouth locks up tighter than a rusty gate. That was your introduction to the native persimmon — and probably the last time you even thought about the fruit.

But here’s the truth: persimmons are one of the easiest, most reliable fruit trees we can grow in East Texas. They’re tougher than peaches, require far less spraying, and once you understand the two types — native and Asian — the whole “puckered mouth” trauma disappears.

Let’s straighten this out. Native Persimmons are the wild ones. Our native Diospyros virginiana trees are about as tough as anything that grows in East Texas. They’ll tolerate drought, lousy soil, hard winters, and occasional neglect. Wildlife absolutely love them — deer, raccoons, coyotes, foxes, and every bird in the neighborhood show up when these ripen.

The fruit is small and wildly astringent until it’s truly ripe. And by ripe, I don’t mean “soft like a peach.” I mean mushy, wrinkled, and about to fall off the tree. Anything firmer than that, and you’ll be puckered up.

If you want a tree that feeds wildlife or reminds you of childhood, natives are great. Yet if you want a dependable, people-friendly fruit crop, keep reading.

Asian Persimmons are the ones that you actually want to grow for fruit production. Asian persimmons (Diospyros kaki) come in two flavors, and understanding the difference is the whole game.

First are the non-astringent types such as Fuyu and Izu. These are the ones that won’t pucker you up and are preferred by those who want a fruit to consume. You can eat them firm, like an apple. Sweet, mild, and crisp. Zero risk of astringency. They’re the best recommendation for beginners and the best bet for consistent harvest.

The other Oriental types are astringent varieties such as Eureka, Hachiya, and Tamopan. Like our native persimmons, these still need to soften completely before eating, but when they do, the flavor is rich and honey-sweet. These are your baking, pudding, spoon-eating persimmons. If you want knockout flavor and don’t mind waiting for that perfect softness, these are worth growing.

Why gardeners should love Oriental persimmons? Quite a few reasons honestly. They have large, showy fruit. They’ll also have beautiful fall color. They require simple care in that they have fewer disease and pest problems than peaches, plums, or apples. Lastly, most varieties will bear fruit reliably once established. 

For most home landscapes, Fuyu or Jiro are the best choice. For the flavor-chasers, Saijo or Hachiya win.

Persimmons are a fall-harvested crop. While simple, folks mess it up all the time. For your Oriental Fuyu/Izu (non-astringent) types, harvest when fully orange but still firm. Now for the Eureka/Hachiya/Tamopan (astringent) types, wait until the fruit is soft, jelly-like, and almost feels too soft to pick. That’s when the sugars are fully developed.

For the native persimmons, many experienced folks suggest you don’t even bother picking. Wait until the fruit practically falls off the tree or drops naturally.

If you decide to add a persimmon to your property, follow the wise advice of other trees and shrubs and plant now through February. 

They will do best in full sun with well-drained soil. They are not fans of wet feet so avoid those areas that hold water. 

Give them a little water the first summer, then they’re tough as nails. If you’ve struggled with peaches or other typical European fruits, this is your redemption tree.

Native or Oriental, there’s a persimmon that fits your place — and if the only thing stopping you is a childhood run-in with an unripe one, well… you’ve avoided the good ones for too long.

Persimmons are one of the rare fruit trees that almost anyone in East Texas can grow successfully. They don’t require constant spraying or pruning, they don’t get hammered by insects, and they don’t collapse after a late freeze.

This fall or winter, plant one. By the time it’s fruiting, you’ll wonder why you didn’t do it sooner.

Bella Salon Christmas Party (Angelina County)

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December 4 @ 10:00 am 6:00 pm

You’re Invited: Bella Salon Christmas Party – December 4th! 

A Celebration of Beauty, Community & Holiday Cheer

The holiday season is officially here, and we could not be more excited to invite YOU to our Annual Bella Salon Christmas Party on Thursday, December 4th from 10 AM – 6 PM!

This is one of our favorite days of the entire year—a time when we get to celebrate with our beautiful Bella family, spoil our guests, and spread a little extra holiday magic. Whether you’re shopping for loved ones, picking up gifts for yourself, or just want to enjoy a fun day at the salon… You don’t want to miss this event.

What You Can Expect:

Door Prizes & Giveaways
We’ll be giving away prizes throughout the day—so yes, every visit comes with a chance to WIN!

25% OFF All Aveda Products
35% OFF All Aveda Skincare
This is our BIGGEST product sale of the year!
Stock up on gifts, favorites, and the Aveda essentials you love.

PRO TIP: Aveda makes the BEST stocking stuffers!

Holiday Drinks & Snacks
Enjoy festive treats while you shop!
We’ll even be serving a specialty Christmas cocktail you’re going to LOVE.

20% OFF Shampoo + Blowout Specials- the day of!
Come treat yourself to a little glam time—perfect for holiday photos, parties, or just because you deserve it.

Extra Service Discounts & Incentives
We’ll have surprise savings on select services throughout the day , including 20% OFF SELECT SERVICES when you prebook with select stylists! – you MUST be here to take advantage of them!

Shop for Christmas… or Treat Yourself

This event is perfect if you want to:
Build a custom Aveda gift box
Treat your best friend, sister, mom… (or YOU!)
Support local small businesses while holiday shopping

Stock up on haircare + skincare for the winter season

Enjoy a beautiful day celebrating with the Bella team

No appointment is required to shop—but if you want a shampoo blowout, we recommend booking ahead!

Event Details:

Bella Salon
Thursday, December 4th
10 AM – 6 PM

Call us at 936-634-2004
Or book online at www.bellasalonoflufkin.com

Bring a friend, bring your holiday spirit, and come be part of the Bella magic.
We truly can’t wait to celebrate with you!

Happy Holidays from all of us at Bella Salon — where beauty, community, and joy always come first. 

Chamber’s Favorite Things (Angelina County)

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December 9 @ 11:30 am 1:00 pm

Join us next Tuesday on December 9, for Chamber’s Favorite Things, part of our Women’s Networking Series, presented by Southside Bank! This exciting event will take place from 11:30 AM to 1 PM, and the best part? Over 20 lucky attendees will walk away with fantastic prizes! Don’t miss out, it’s just around the corner!

Secure your spot by registering today! And capture the Christmas spirit with a snapshot with The Big Picture Events; rumor has it, a special guest might make an appearance!

Register today >>> bit.ly/WNL-1225

$20 for investors

$ 25 for non-investors

900 Crown Colony Dr.
Lufkin, TX 75901 United States
+ Google Map
936-675-1099

City of Lufkin Announces a Full Weekend of Holiday Festivities December 4-7, 2025

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LUFKIN, TEXAS
The City of Lufkin is thrilled to announce an exciting lineup of holiday events taking place from December 4 through December 7, 2025. From beloved traditions to new seasonal favorites, Downtown Lufkin will be busy with family-friendly festivities, live entertainment, and holiday cheer all weekend long.

Thursday, December 4, 2025

The Grand Ol’ Christmas Show

7:00 PM · The Pines Theater; 113 S First St, Lufkin, TX 75901
Presented by the Angelina Arts Alliance

Kick off the holiday weekend with a nostalgic and heartwarming performance of The Grand Ol’ Christmas Show. This live variety show features classic Christmas tunes, comedy, and storytelling, bringing audiences a cheerful and timeless holiday experience at the historic Pines Theater.

For more info, visit: angelinaarts.org/ticket—events#calendar-4ad6ed84-5dcf-46c5-bfcc-b5354a8f3182-event-802bd172-0d77-4a8c-8240-f59978eeb92d

Friday, December 5, 2025

Lighting of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Pumping Unit

Festivities begin at 5:00 PM; 222 E. Shepherd Ave
Presented by LUFKIN Industries

Lufkin’s most iconic holiday tradition returns to Downtown: the Lighting of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Pumping Unit. Standing 45 feet tall, this fully operational pumpjack is decorated with thousands of sparkling lights and comes to life once it’s dark enough for the lights to shine. The lighting will be led by LUFKIN Industries, continuing a celebrated tradition that generations of families have enjoyed.

Movie in the Square

Immediately following the Lighting of Rudolph · Cotton Square
Presented by Angelina Arts Alliance
Sponsored by Security & Guaranty Abstract Co. and Visit Lufkin

After Rudolph light ups the night, the festivities continue in Cotton Square with a free Christmas movie under the stars. Guests are encouraged to bring chairs and blankets and enjoy an evening of holiday magic with friends and family.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

ADAC Reindeer Run

8:00 AM Morning Event · Downtown Lufkin

Start the morning with the ADAC Reindeer Run, a fun and energetic race supporting ADAC of Deep East Texas. This community run brings together families, athletes, and holiday supporters for a joyful start to Saturday’s celebrations.

For more info, visit: runsignup.com/Race/TX/Lufkin/ADACReindeerRun

Lufkin’s Lighted Christmas Parade

5:30 PM · Downtown Lufkin

In the evening, the streets of Downtown Lufkin sparkle during Lufkin’s Lighted Christmas Parade. Featuring dazzling floats, cheerful performances, and community spirit, this beloved parade continues to be one of the most anticipated events of the season.

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Festival of Trees

2:00 – 4:00 PM · Museum of East Texas; 503 N Second St, Lufkin, TX 75901

Complete the weekend at the Festival of Trees, a joyful celebration showcasing beautifully decorated Christmas trees. It’s a warm and festive way to wrap up Lufkin’s holiday weekend.

For more info, visit: metlufkin.org/event-details-registration/family-day

A Weekend of Holiday Magic

“With so many events happening throughout Downtown Lufkin, this weekend offers something truly special for every member of our community,” said Visit Lufkin. “We’re excited to bring our residents and visitors together for a memorable holiday experience.”

For more information about holiday happenings in Lufkin, visit VisitLufkin.com or follow Visit Lufkin on social media.

PATV Powersports Grand Opening (Jasper County)

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December 6 @ 9:00 am 2:00 pm

YOU’RE INVITED

Join us for our Grand Opening Celebration featuring Music, a Polaris Inc. Sportsman 450 ATV Giveaway, and delicious offerings from Wing Junkiez Concession’s and Ken’s Treats. Witness the ribbon-cutting ceremony held by the Jasper-Lake Sam Rayburn Area Chamber of Commerce. Ready to enjoy a fun-filled day? We can’t wait to bring the community together to celebrate.

Timeline (December 6th, 2025)
• 9 AM- Grand Opening Starts
•10AM-Ribbon Cutting Ceremony Begins
•11-2 PM- Lunch and Sweet Treats by Wing Junkies and Ken’s Treats.
•12PM-Winner Announced for ATV Giveaway
• 2 PM-Grand Opening Ends

How to enter the Giveaway?
1.) Can enter at both locations (PATV Powersports/PATV Powersports-Jasper)
2.) Purchase a new/used unit=5 Entries
3.) Spend $500+ in Parts or Service=1 Entry

ATV Giveaway Entries start October 22-December 6th, 2025

Trail of Lights (San Augustine County)

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December 6 @ 6:00 pm 8:00 pm

FREE FAMILY FUN! Saturday Dec 6, 6-8 pm. Santa and Mrs. Claus, gifts, cookies, cocoa, wassail, crafts, games, a snowball fight! Come to Mission Dolores and enjoy the fun. RAIN OR SHINE! Walk the lighted trails during the whole month of December.

Coldspring Volunteer Velanteer Fire Department 55th Anniversary Gala

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December 6 @ 6:00 pm 8:00 pm

GALA REMINDER!
Coldspring Volunteer Fire Department’s 55th Anniversary Gala is almost here, and we are SO excited!

Date/Time Information:
December 5th, 6:00 PM
Location:
125 FM 1514, Coldspring, TX 77331

Get ready for a night full of celebration, memories, and community fun as we honor 55 amazing years of service!

INTERESTED IN GOING?

Tickets are $55, and you can grab yours from any CVFD member!

Someone will be at the station every weekday from noon to 1 pm and 5 pm to 7 pm for ticket sales. If arrangements need to be made outside of this time, please call. 832-599-3226 or 936-653-2302, we accept cash, check, or cc

Or stop by the station any Tuesday night from 7 PM – 9 PM to pick one up in person!

AND WE STILL NEED YOUR OLD PHOTOS!

If you’ve got any throwback pictures from past CVFD events, calls, parades, or community moments… we want them!

You can:

Send them to us on Facebook Messenger
Comment them down below
Or email them to coldspringvfd@gmail.com

Help us make this night even more special with the memories YOU have shared with us over the years!

Let’s make this gala unforgettable! See y’all there!

(936) 653-2184

View Organizer Website

Kids Talk About God by Carey Kinsolving and Friends

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How Can We Make Jesus More Important In Our Lives?

“We can make Jesus more important in our lives by putting Christ in the center of all we do,” says Nathaniel, 8. “We do this by finding pleasure in studying God’s Word, learning about him and hiding God’s Word in our heart that we might not sin against him.”

The issue in all of life always comes down to this question, “Who is the center of the universe?”

If I’m the center, then everything must revolve around me. Living the self-centered life is difficult because I can’t always get everyone to conform to my plan for their lives. It’s hard taking the place of God, but many try it.

With Jesus Christ as the center, my world takes on a decidedly different orbit. I’m now seeking to discover God’s game plan for my life and others. I don’t have the pressure of pushing my way to the top of a fantasy world where I’m the center.

As the good shepherd, Jesus will lead me in life paths that are good for me and others. People may misunderstand me or even ridicule me because I’m not following the crowd, but it’s OK because I’m living before an audience of One. I’m not living for people’s approval. I’m living in light of eternity. I’m not a soloist. I’m a team player, and God is calling the plays.

When the disciples of John the Baptist told him that the ministry of Jesus was increasing, he said, “He must increase, but I must decrease” (John 3:30).

How does Jesus increase? Use your memory, says Chandler, 8: “Remember all the times that Jesus saved you from something so that it will get you to believe in him.”

Short memories cause us to block God’s plan for causing Jesus to increase. We so easily forget where we were when God found us. The Bible paints a picture of God ever pursuing us when we were “lost.” Yes, lost. Without God, you are as lost as a goose flying north in the middle of winter.

To be found by God means you come face-to-face with the reality that the universe revolves around Jesus Christ, not you. You realize that when Jesus died on the cross, he died for your sins. You accept God’s free gift of eternal life by believing in Jesus as your savior.

Now that your eternal destiny is sealed, you can reorient your world as Grace, 9, suggests: “We need to be more like a servant and become less important because Jesus is the one who should be the most important.”

When Jesus’ disciples got in an argument over who was the greatest disciple, Jesus said, “He who is greatest among you, let him be as the younger, and he who governs as he who serves” (Luke 22:26).

I can guarantee this is not what the disciples had in mind when they argued over who was top dog. The disciples were shocked when Jesus washed their feet at the Passover meal on the night before his crucifixion. Slaves or household servants usually washed the feet of guests.

Think about this: As Jesus becomes more important in your life, you’ll think in ways you can’t even imagine now. Like the disciples, you’ll be shocked at what Jesus wants to do through you.

Memorize this truth: “He must increase, but I must decrease” (John 3:30).

Ask this question: Is Jesus increasing or decreasing in your life?

______________________________________________________________________________________

Kids Talk About God is designed for families to study the Bible together. Research shows that parents who study the Bible with their children give their character, faith and spiritual life a powerful boost. To receive Kids Talk About God three times a week in a free, email subscription, visit www.KidsTalkAboutGod.org/email

First “Bible Map” Still Shapes How We Think About Borders

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How a 500-year-old printing mistake changed the way Christians see the world

If you open a modern study Bible, chances are you’ll find a set of maps tucked in the back: Israel in the time of Joshua, the kingdoms of David and Solomon, Paul’s missionary journeys. For many believers across the Texas Forest Country, those maps have quietly shaped how we imagine the biblical world – and even how we think about nations and borders today.

A new study from the University of Cambridge says that influence runs deeper than most of us realize. It traces the story back 500 years to what may be the first Bible ever printed with a full map of the Holy Land – an Old Testament published in Zürich in 1525, during the early days of the Reformation. And it all started with a mistake.

The Bible map that was printed backwards

In 1525, printer Christoph Froschauer released a German Old Testament that included a woodcut map of the Holy Land by artist Lucas Cranach the Elder. The idea was radical for its time: show readers where the stories of Scripture took place, right on the page. 

There was just one problem.

The map was printed backwards – literally flipped so that the Mediterranean Sea appears on the east side instead of the west. According to Cambridge scholar Nathan MacDonald, no one in the print shop seems to have noticed. People in northern Europe simply didn’t know the geography of Palestine well enough to catch the error. 

Professor Nathan MacDonald with Christopher Froschauer’s 1525 Old Testament open at Lucas Cranach the Elder’s map of the Holy Land, in the Wren Library, Trinity College, Cambridge   Credit University of Cambridge

Yet this “wrong-way” map became hugely important. It showed:

  • The route of Israel’s wilderness wanderings
  • The Jordan River and key cities like Jericho and Jerusalem
  • And, most importantly, the Promised Land divided into twelve tribal territories – Judah, Benjamin, Dan, Naphtali, and the rest – each marked off with clear lines. 

That visual of God’s people living in neat, bordered blocks of land would echo through centuries of Bible publishing.

From spiritual inheritance to political borders

MacDonald’s article in The Journal of Theological Studies argues that maps like Cranach’s did something subtle but powerful: they taught people to see the Bible – and eventually the modern world – in terms of sharp, linear borders between homogenous territories

Map of the Holy Land from Christoph Froschauer’s 1525 Das Alt Testament dütsch (Zentralbibliothek Zürich, 31 Nv 02: 1, https://doi.org/10.3931/e-rara-32932).

In the Middle Ages, Christian maps of the Holy Land were less about politics and more about pilgrimage and inheritance. They showed the tribal territories of Israel as a way of saying:

“This is the land God promised His people – and in Christ, these promises belong spiritually to the Church.”

The borders on those early maps symbolized spiritual inheritance, not modern state lines. Christians “walked” those maps with their eyes, imagining themselves traveling from Nazareth to Jericho to Jerusalem, visiting holy places in prayer even if they never left home. 

But something changed between the late 1400s and the 1600s:

  • Mapmakers in Europe began drawing clear boundaries not just in Bible maps, but on maps of kingdoms and countries.
  • Atlases started to show political territories separated by sharp lines – France here, Spain there, each color-coded and enclosed. 
  • At the same time, Protestant Bibles spread across Europe, often with four standard maps: the wilderness journey, the tribal division under Joshua, the land in Jesus’ day, and Paul’s journeys. 

In other words, Bible maps pioneered the style – and then the rest of the world followed.

Detail (center-right) of the Large Burchard Map showing Ephraim, Benjamin and Dan and tribal borders marked in red ink (Carte nautiche, IV (recto); by permission of Ministero della cultura / Archivio di Stato di Firenze; https://archiviodistatofirenze.cultura.gov.it/archividigitali/riproduzione/?id=148182&ua=37)

Those tribal borders, originally meant to picture God’s people receiving their inheritance, became the visual template for how people thought nations “ought” to look: neatly divided, clearly separated, and fixed on a map.

Reading borders back into the Bible

The influence didn’t stop with cartography. MacDonald shows that, as political thinking in Europe shifted toward the idea of the modern nation-state, people also started reading that idea back into Scripture itself

Take Genesis 10, often called the “Table of Nations.” It lists the descendants of Noah’s sons – Shem, Ham, and Japheth – and briefly mentions where their families spread out after the flood. For centuries, Christian writers were mainly interested in:

  • How different languages came from this moment (especially in connection with the Tower of Babel in Genesis 11)
  • Which biblical names might be linked to which ancient peoples

But by the 1600s and 1700s, some scholars and legal thinkers began to treat Genesis 10 as if it were a divine blueprint for modern national borders.

For example:

  • English writers argued that Japheth’s descendants received Europe as their allotted territory and that the “isles of the Gentiles” in Genesis 10:5 included the British Isles – implying that Britain’s place on the map was ordained by God. 
  • The jurist John Selden used Genesis 10 to argue that land (and even the sea) could be divided into territories with clear, exclusive ownership – much like private property. 
  • Commentators began to describe this division “after their lands” as an orderly carving up of the world into fixed, bounded territories, much like Joshua dividing Canaan among the twelve tribes. 

A text that hardly mentions borders at all gradually became, in some people’s minds, a proof-text for the way modern nations are drawn on a map.

Why this matters in 2025

For readers across Angelina, Nacogdoches, Jasper, Newton, Polk, and the rest of our Texas Forest Country region, this might sound like distant academic history. 

But MacDonald warns that the effects are very current:

  • Many believers today still assume that our modern idea of a nation with fixed, hard borders is directly and straightforwardly “biblical.”
  • Some government communication – even here in the United States – frames border enforcement with Bible verses, as if guarding a national boundary is the same kind of calling described in Isaiah or Joshua. 

In fact, MacDonald asked both ChatGPT and Google Gemini whether borders are biblical. Both AI systems simply answered “yes,” reflecting this widespread assumption. He argues the reality is more complicated. 

The Bible absolutely cares about land, people, justice, and how communities live together under God. But it’s speaking into very different political realities than modern nation-states, passports, and GPS-drawn lines on a screen.

A more careful way to read our Bible maps

So what do we do with this as Bible-believing Christians in East Texas?

  1. Be grateful for the maps – but recognize their history.
    Those Bible maps in the back of your favorite translation are powerful tools. They help us remember that the stories of Scripture happened in real places, not in some fantasy world. But they were created by humans, at a particular time, with particular assumptions about borders and territory.
  2. Distinguish between spiritual inheritance and political claims.
    When we see the tribal allotments of Israel, it’s good to remember the spiritual reality they point to – God giving His people an inheritance, and in Christ, offering us an eternal one. That’s different from saying our modern political arrangements are guaranteed or mandated in the same way.
  3. Be cautious about giving our map lines divine authority.
    Borders matter. Nations have responsibilities. Security is real. But whenever anyone – on the left or the right – claims that their way of drawing lines on a map is simply “God’s way,” we should slow down and go back to Scripture carefully. 
  4. Let the Bible shape our politics, not the other way around.
    MacDonald’s big point is that in early modern Europe, political ideas began to reshape how people read the Bible. The challenge for us in the Texas Forest Country is to flip that back: allow the Word of God to correct and challenge our assumptions, instead of forcing it to support whatever political map we happen to live under.

Seeing the land with fresh eyes

 The ‘Modern Map of the Holy Land’ from the 1486 (1482) Ulm reprinting of Ptolemy’s Cosmographia (https://purl.stanford.edu/fs844yc9264).

Five hundred years ago, a misprinted map in a Zürich Bible helped kick off a quiet revolution. It turned the Bible into what one scholar calls a “Renaissance book,” complete with maps and visual aids, and it gave countless believers a way to take a “virtual pilgrimage” across the Holy Land with their own eyes. 

That same map, and the many that followed, also helped teach generations to see the world as a patchwork of territories and borders – sometimes reading more into the Bible than the text itself actually says.

For Christians in East Texas, the invitation is simple but profound:

  • Open your Bible.
  • Look at the maps.
  • Give thanks that God’s story is rooted in real places and real history.
  • And then ask: What is this text really saying?

Not just about borders and nations, but about the God who claims every tribe, tongue, and people as His own.