Welcome to Bible Hub's library of commentaries. We have just added many new sources, including The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Bengel's Gnomon, Lange's Commentary, Hastings Great Texts and many more.

 

 Click the Commentary tab or pulldown menu for a full selection of commentaries over any Bible passage you are researching. Many commentaries are also available in Parallel Format via the commentary tab.

The Theology of Work Bible Commentary explores what the Bible says about faith and work, book by book through the Bible. This robust commentary has been vetted by a team of scholars and practitioners committed to a creating a comprehensive, biblically accurate theology of work.


Sda Bible Commentary Download


DOWNLOAD 🔥 https://urlca.com/2y3Crf 🔥



Each volume, informed by the best of up-to-date evangelical scholarship, presents passage-by-passage commentary based on the NIV along with background information on authorship, setting, theme and various interpretive issues. A unique format allows the main commentary to focus on the vital message of the New Testament for today's church, while bottom-of-the-page notes include valuable scholarly information to support those who use the volumes as a resource for preaching or teaching preparation.

Seldom have such readable commentary and reliable research helps been available in the same volume! Preachers, teachers, students and other individuals who want to dig deep into the heart of the New Testament will find an indispensable companion in the IVP New Testament Commentary Series.

Song of Songs: The Bible's Love Poem - by Keith Simons. Bible students disagree about the meaning and purpose of this book. This commentary explains the things that are clear in the Song.

The commentary shows up fine as a parallel resource when I am in another commentary. It shows up if I search for type:commentary. However, it never shows up in the passage guide, even though there are milestones in it. The sample from the post has commentary on the first few verses of John 1. But opening the passage guide for these verses doesn't bring it up.

I had the same problem, and solved it by setting the type to Bible Commentary instead of Commentary. Not very obvious, but it is the trick. I have only one resource tagged as Commentary, and it is a commentary on the Pseudepigrapha.

I must be missing something, then. I did set it to "Bible Commentary" (but also tried "Commentary", just in case). Still not working. The book gets created, all bible links and headings work perfectly, but it doesn't show in the passage guide. I used both the [[@Bible:reference]] form and the [[@reference]] form shown in the help file

However, I started to wonder whether the search results for the commentary section were being cached in Logos. So I closed Logos, re-opened it, and then tried the Passage Guide again. It showed up! And now it shows up consistently.

Actually, this would explain why today, when I retried the sample commentary file referenced from the Wiki suddenly showed up this morning in the Passage Guide when it didn't last night. I had shutdown and reopened Logos.

What is a commentary?

A Bible commentary explains or interprets the Bible or a specific book of the Bible.

Some commentaries cover the entire Bible, while others are devoted to individual books of the Bible. Whole-Bible commentaries may be one-volume or multi-volume. Most libraries, both public and academic, have at least one Bible commentary in their collections. Trexler Library has many. Some are located in the Reference area and must be used in the library. Others are located in the General Collection and may be checked out. Commentaries in e-book format are also available.


Search Tip: If you are looking for a commentary on a specific book of the Bible, add the name of that book to your search terms (e.g., bible commentary genesis).

Whether you see the Bible as the living word of God, or as a highly significant document from the ancient world, or as one of the classic works of world literature, The Oxford Bible Commentary will put in your hands everything you need to study and understand the biblical text. Here is a monumental, line-by-line critical commentary on the Bible, covering all the books that appear in the NRSV. An essential reference work, this definitive book provides authoritative, non-denominational commentary written by an international team of more than 70 leading scholars from various religious backgrounds. Incorporating the latest research, the contributors examine the books of the Bible in exhaustive detail, taking a historical-critical approach that attempts to shed light on the scriptures by placing them in the context in which their first audiences would have encountered them, asking how they came to be composed and what were the purposes of their authors. The Commentary includes a general introduction, extensive introductions to both testaments and the Apocrypha, and briefer introductions to the particular books, plus an essay with commentary on important post-biblical Jewish and Christian literature. Each article concludes with a bibliography that points the reader toward the most important supplemental works in English, including major reference works, introductions, and so forth.

This Bible Commentary has been developed, in common commentary order, to make it easy to look up scriptures and conduct organized personal study. The program currently covers only the Old Testament, but plans are to add New Testament commentaries in the future.

The Earth Bible Commentary series provides ecological readings of biblical texts, focusing on some of the core issues facing the world today. The writers accentuate issues in the original texts that relate specifically to the care of our global environment, and the interaction between religion and ecology. The volumes read the bible from the perspective of the Earth and consider how the Earth can be presented as sacred. 


The Central and Eastern European Bible Commentary is a groundbreaking, multi-year work and the first full-Bible commentary to come out of Central and Eastern Europe. The aim of this resource is to provide a contemporary, contextually relevant, church-based commentary written exclusively by biblical scholars from the region. Rooted in scholarship, while also written in clear and accessible language, this commentary will appeal to Christians everywhere.

Well established in scholarship, as well as culturally sensitive, this commentary is readable, informative, and applicable. Its contents are a welcome contribution in the field of Biblical interpretation.

The inclusion of a commentary or book in these lists does not mean that I agree with or endorse every particular interpretation found within it or everything that author may have said elsewhere. If a book is included in one of these articles, it simply means that I find the book helpful in one way or another to at least some audiences.

Aside from one or two very recent exceptions, I have not been provided copies of these commentaries by publishers. I have purchased some. I have borrowed others from libraries. The commentaries I have included on these lists are there because I found them helpful in one way or another. They are not included because of any quid pro quo arrangement with any publishers. If any publishers did begin to send complimentary copies of commentaries, I would not object (commentaries are generally expensive), but it would not guarantee a recommendation of any particular commentary.

The Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible Commentary refers to a biblical commentary entitled a Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible, prepared by Robert Jamieson, Andrew Robert Fausset and David Brown and published in 1871; and derived works from this initial publication, in differing numbers of volumes and abridgements.

Please use this website to explore information and samples relating to the Smyth & Helwys Bible Commentary. If you have questions not answered here, feel free to call us at 1-800-747-3016, or email us at commentary@helwys.com.View Available VolumesStanding Order PlanSHBC UpdatesHelpful LinksOur HistoryCareersBooksellersLibrariesMediaAuthor Marketing FormExam/Desk Copy RequestSubmit a ManuscriptDelivery PolicyReturn/Refund PolicyContactContact UsCompany Address:

6316 Peake Road

Macon, GA 31210-3960

This Bible Commentary has been developed, in common commentary order, to make it easy to look up scriptures and conduct organized personal study. The program currently covers only the Old Testament, but plans are to add New Testament commentaries in the future. You may be interested in accessing our newer layout of the Bible Commentary at -study-tools/beyond-today-bible-commentary

NOTE: If you experience trouble finding scriptural passages, if a link directs to the wrong commentary or if a chart or image is missing, search instead at the printable PDF version of the commentary here: bible.ucg.org/bible-reading-program/index.htm The PDF version will allow you to download and print his commenary reading section.

UPDATE July 2018: The commentary on the book of Ecclesiastes has been completed. Click to view the printable PDF version. The Ecclesiastes link in the book listing below does not work, please view the PDF.

For 40 years, the New Bible Commentary has set the standard for works of its kind. Now in this completely revised fourth edition (including over 80% new and updated material), the best one-volume commentary is now even better. This readable and accessible volume brings together many of the finest scholars of our day to meet the needs of students, teachers and Bible readers. The 21st-century edition of the New Bible Commentary offers 66 solid, concise, evangelical commentaries---one on each book of the Bible. These detailed (passage-by-passage or verse-by-verse) commentaries, based on the NIV text, are accompanied by introductory material on date, authorship, purpose, key themes, outlines and discussions of recent developments in biblical scholarship, along with numerous maps, diagrams, and tables. In addition, seven new introductory articles have been added which overview biblical history and types of biblical literature:  Approaching the Bible (D.A. Carson) Biblical History (Gordon McConville) The Pentateuch (Gordon Wenham) Poetry in the Bible (Philip Jensen) Apocrypha and Apocalyptic (Roger Beckwith) Reading the Gospels (R.T. France) Reading the Epistles (D.A. Carson)  Contributors include: T. Desmond Alexander, George R. Beasley-Murray, D.A. Carson, Richard T. France, Donald Guthrie, Gordon P. Hugenberger, Philip A. Jensen, J.A. Motyer, Moiss Silva, Douglas Stuart, Gordon J. Wenham, and others. Overview of the New Bible Commentary: 21st Century Edition:  Theologically moderate/conservative Non-technical (no knowledge of Hebrew, Greek or Aramaic needed) For laypeople and teachers Uses the New International Version (NIV) Bible as its English base  2351a5e196

google download settings

cubase ic pro

download touch n go ewallet for android

yamaha moto-4 repair manual free download

reflector warning failed to rate http(s) download