You can search the ESV bible online, and cleverly the geeks who run the service have compiled a list of abbreviations people use for bible books aimed at web programmers who have bible search software things going on. So they know they have to include mark, mk and mr, but not mrk. Okay so this isn't revolutionary, or particularly interesting, but what does fascinate me is the fact that Genesis is the most queried book, beating Matthew (the second most queried book) by approximately 3000 queries. Not that I'm dissing Genesis, and not that I wanted Matthew to win (I didn't... Go Team Romans! Woo Yeah!) but I find it very odd that it scored so high. Poor Obadiah though. That's gotta hurt.
iamsparticus.co.uk - bring lies to your desktop!! ;)
Look closer - Psalms was the most queried book.
They've got some of the song names wrong - using the secondary names. Slightly confusing, even for a church band leader...
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Rhys
Top stuff, and surprisingly interesting like you say. In the world of Obscure Christian Charts No-one Seems To Know About (But Are On The Web), I really like the top 25 copyrightable Christian songs chart that the Church Copyright Licensing people do.
Go on, guess which song is at Number One. And it's not Mr Kendrick.