| Marc, I haven't seen the one that you mentioned, but one that I have
that I really like is the Harper's Bible Commentary. Actually, there
is also a Harper's Bible Dictionary, which is another volume, and the
two books together form a nice set. Both books were published within
the last few years, and I may be available at bookstores.
-- Mike
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| re:316.0
Hi Mark:
FYI - I have the four vol. J-F-P and have found it very helpful, but it
really depends on what you're looking for in a commentary.
Matthew Henry's one vol. unabridged is Reformed in perspective, sound
exegetically and GREAT for application, but lacks in historical and
original language insights. You really can't go wrong with this one no
matter what else you may suppliment it with later.
The J-F-P, is a little more technical and less readable, but very good
at nuances in the grrek and hebrew.
The Bible Knowledge Commentary in two vols. is very readable and a good
cross between the two.
I can second Mike Valenza's support for the Harper's. Again it's a mite
less technical than some but user friendly.
The Tyndale series is really worth a look. It comes in 66 paperback
vols. done by a series of expositors, and vols. range in price from
around $4.95 to $8.95. Here you can buy the one you're most interested
in at the time, and build inexpensively in lumps.
I would avoid Barclay's because even though its very readable, it has a
real tendency to wander from the Biblical text.
For more advanced studies, the New International Commentary series and
the Anchor Bible series are very very good.
But to be honest, individual commentaries on the various books is
ultimately the best way to go. More expensive yes, but greatly more
informative.
For other base necessities, do get an exhaustive concordance be it
Young's, Strong's,Cruden's or Hazard's. A good Bible dictionary will
always be worth the purchase and (if you don't have one yet), a good
study Bible with helps is an absolute.
Hope some of this helps,
Lisa
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