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Regarding the New Testament, better look at this while it is on a sale: Bakers Hendriksen-Kistemaker NT Commentary (12 volumes), sale price $74.90:
I've been very pleased with OTL (Old Testament Library). I was reading the books of Samuel recently from the New American Bible Revised Edition and find these stories very exiting:Old Testament Library (7 vols.). I would use these volumes:
Judges by Niditch
I & II Samuel by A. Graeme Auld
I & II Kings by Sweeney (this volume seems to have new research and to be renewing preceding Academic commentary in other series)
Song of Songs by Exum
Micah by Mays
I added 3 more Hermeneia-volumes, look in:
http://www.christianforums.com/t7644634-post60159103/#poststop
... and click the link Hermeneia Upgrade (3 vols.)Thanks cybrwurm for the opinion!
One of the technical commentaries does however have a point regarding one verse: Hermeneia-series Matthew 8-20, by Ulrich Luz, a 600-page volume, and it tells us that Mt 11:27 was added by the church. That particular verse, not its parallel passage, was used by Arians to refuse Trinity, plus a today's denomination (I ordered their booklet for free). See the page from Hermeneia: p. 164
I still hold to all the recommendations I've given in this thread "Practical Commentary on Scripture".
See this new post: What are the Top Ten Intermediate commentary series prioritised in your Logos and justify? - Logos Bible Software Forums
The largest part of the commentaries I have are in Logos.
Someone has offered me a "used" copy of UBS Translators Handbook New Testament in Accordance, I'm thinking of bidding $85. And I want to have Sirach in Logos or Accordance - whichever releases it. But that and some technical commentaries I have don't belong in "Practical Commentaries on Scripture". One of the technical commentaries does however have a point regarding one verse: Hermeneia-series Matthew 8-20, by Ulrich Luz, a 600-page volume, and it tells us that Mt 11:27 was added by the church. That particular verse, not its parallel passage, was used by Arians to refuse Trinity, plus a today's denomination (I ordered their booklet for free). See the page from Hermeneia: p. 164.
When I'm going to college I'm going to be well prepared. I'm going to take classical Gk classes first. I have been buying books which I will have use of for a long time:... I would have wanted to keep discussing with cybrwurm.
I have some commentaries as printed matter, I've mentioned most of them here.
Accordance is currently running a ale on Hermeneia until midnight EDT Monday, June 1, 2015, and that the sale over includes both the full set, upgrades, and the NT or OT sets. Purchasing a set once entitle the owner of an Accordance license to purchase upgrades when they come out, a few of the older volumes are being replaced and volumes that cover parts of the Bile and Apocrypha/Apostolic Fathers not previously covered are either forthcoming or will probably be covered some point in the future.
I personally find great value in the set. I have used various volumes for research papers in grad school and sermon prep. I highly recommend.
I recently wrote about a purchase I made during a sale in Libronix/Logos/Verbum/Noet:1 Clem:
I bought and got home yesterday The First Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians, by W K Lowther Clarke D.D., Society for promoting Christian knowledge (a publisher that still exists), (1937)
EDIT1 June 19. 2012: I think the commentary is very good (called introduction).
It has a 44½ page introduction (there's of course also on top of that about authorship, occasion of the letter, dating, manuscripts).
Contents of the introduction (about 1 page each if nothing mentioned): Discussing Peter a lot several pages; 3 pages the intervention of the Roman church; the doctrine of God; Christology; the holy Spirit; 9 pages the church of Rome in the 1st century and the Church; 3½ pages the ministry; Paulinism: the Atonement, Justification, etc.; Eschatology; relation to the state; morality; a little more than 1 page the Old Testament; 4 pages the New Testament; 6 pages liturgy; 3 pages conclusion; the entire books of 1 Clem critically translated; 22 pages notes; 1 page general index; almost 2½ pages index of Biblical quotations
[...]
Previously edited by Unix; 19th June 2012 at 7:55 AM local time. Reason: correct typos &add 1999 The Apostolic Fathers: Greek Texts and English Translations
Previously edited by Unix; 10th January 2013 at 2:20 AM local time. Reason: add new Ro review and note new edition of Apostolic Fathers
Previously edited by Unix; 11th January 2013 at 3:17 PM local time. Reason: clarificiations
I've made sure I also have following [...] volumes:
[...]
Hermeneia: The Didache: A Commentary on the Didache $33
[...]
Has anyone read this book by TAN? Apparently it was recommended by 14 bishops and I think even a Pope. It was made in 1920, but it is such a good book apparently a lot of people use it today and had 16 editions. And it probably isn't littered with too much historo-criticism like the New Jerome's commentary is. I found one on amazon for 2 bux! You gotta love the older catholic books. They have this kick that the newer ones just don't have. They don't have problems using words like "Sodomites" and "reprobates", lol. Especially comments like this:
"Detest and fear sin, especially sins of impurity. Set hell before your eyes, think of the horrible torments, carefully avoid all temptations to such sins. Say thus" "What will the whole world profit me, if I follow my own inclinations, and suffer eternity in hell!"
You just don't get stuff like that anymore in sermons or books , lol.
http://books.google.com/books?id=4Y...m=4&sqi=2&ved=0CDoQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q&f=false
or st.Jerome he was known for his wording tooHave you ever read any of John Chrysostom's commentaries on the New Testament?
Eph Col volume in action! See: https://community.logos.com/forums/t/87879.aspx ... the commentary I'm referring to is Ephesians Colossians in the Paideia -series by Charles H. Talbert. I bought that volume in Logos on March 26. 2014. (OliveTree also carries it but is a little more expensive.) You can also sometimes find worn paperback copies for a fair price considering it's not older than from 2007.
Other Ephesians commentaries I've written about previously in this thread:
Eph by Pheme Perkins presents....
A competing Colossians commentary (just that book of the Bible), see this volume that I discussed during the Spring: A commentary on 1 Jn!! As an...:In fact meta-studies have shown that the scholarly consensus was never as assured about Colossians and Ephesians being non-Pauline as was often stated. [...]
Here's some more good practical commentaries I recommend, printed or if You have the software anyway: as electronic, except that [...] thick but [...] on [a] very important book of the Bible (1 Pt):
[...]
Paul Achtemeier: 1 Peter (Hermeneia -series), Fortress Press, 1996 423 pages, verse-by-verse
The Eph Col volume I mentioned and recommended on Aug. 18. last year is now on a sale, the sale price is $1.99: https://verbum.com/products/22818/paideia-commentaries-on-the-new-testament-ephesians-and-colossians I'm glad I have been using it - it was well worth its price and still is (I paid $22.50 on March 26. 2014) so I wouldn't part with it.
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