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ESV Study Bible
Unavailable
ESV Study Bible
Unavailable
ESV Study Bible
Ebook14,062 pages

ESV Study Bible

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

5/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

The ESV Study Bible was created to help people understand the Bible in a deeper way. Combining the best and most recent evangelical Christian scholarship with the highly regarded ESV text, it is the most comprehensive study Bible ever published.

The ESV Study Bible features more than 2,750 pages of extensive, accessible Bible resources, including completely new notes, full-color maps, illustrations, charts, timelines, and articles created by an outstanding team of 93 evangelical Christian scholars and teachers. In addition to the 757,000 words of the ESV Bible itself, the notes and resources of the ESV Study Bible comprise an additional 1.1 million words of insightful explanation and teaching-equivalent to a 20-volume Bible resource library all contained in one volume. (Please note this edition does not come with free access to the Online ESV Study Bible resources.)

  • 9-point Lexicon type (single-column Bible text); 7-point Frutiger type (double-column study notes)
  • Black letter text
  • Concordance
  • Extensive articles
  • 240 full-color maps and illustrations
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 15, 2008
ISBN9781433518874
Unavailable
ESV Study Bible

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Reviews for ESV Study Bible

Rating: 4.753676446691177 out of 5 stars
5/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is the third five pound brick of study Bibles I have acquired recently. This is coupled with the online ESV Bible which makes for a great working Bible. I love the notes and find it to be one of my favorites. I'm swiftly falling in love with the ESV.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Incredible resource which sets a new standard in study helps and scholarship. 100-page section in the back provides lots of top quality articles on theology and Christian living. Great full-color illustrations. Edited by Wayne Grudem and J. I. Packer.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Excellent work
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I love the ESV translation and based on what I've seen and heard, it's the most accurate "non-wooden" translation available in English today. Sadly, however, I don't care as much for the commentary in the ESV Study Bible. I find it to be lacking in depth, sometimes so obvious as to be redundant, and sometimes wildly interpretive. I hope some different study versions emerge to go along with the excellent translation.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Positives of the ESV Study BibleThe Maps! If you like maps, this is your Bible. Most Study Bibles have maps, especially in the back of the Book. But, this study Bible is map-paradise. There are maps in the back, but also in the front of each book placing the book in location. Not only that but there are maps in the study notes at the bottom of the page, and they are in color. So, if you are talking about a battle, in the notes there will be a map of the area and arrows showing the movement of each side. If there is a journey, a map will chart the course.The Charts! I'm a "chart-girl." At least my girlfriend used to call me that. There are charts, charts, charts: genealogies, charts of kings, charts of all the mentions of a word or phrase in a book (such as how many time The Spirit of the Lord is mentioned), charts of percentages, etc. The Historical/Archaeological Corroboration: Events are put into their historical setting. For example, the book of Nahum is a prophecy against the Assyrians, and the author names the rulers of Assyria with their dates of reign, the affliction they brought against Israel, and the significance historically. The study notes often list archaeological corroboration. For example, in I Kings 14:25-26 the note tells that "a monumental relief of the Bubastite Portal of the main temple of Amon...catalogs, town by town, Shishak's military incursion into Israel and Judah. The Karnak relief provides striking verification of the biblical account."The literary significance: At the beginning of each book there is a section titled "Literary Features." This section clearly talks about the genre of the book and some literary features employed by the author, holding each book up as some of the world's great literature.Possible Negatives: Each book of the Bible has a different author/s for the notes; some authors seem more conservative than others. (This is also one of this Study Bible's great strengths because dozens of theologians are writing in their area of specialization.) For example, there is a note in Genesis arguing that the flood did not have to be worldwide.Prophecy: Your view of future prophecy may differ. For example, the notes in the book of I Thessalonians do not use the term "Rapture" but instead the "Second Coming of Christ." However, the notes in Revelation do delineate the various viewpoints on end-time prophecy. There are diagrams/timelines showing future events from the various schools of interpretation including Dispensational Premillennialism, Historical Premillennialism, Preterists Schools, Idealist School, etc. Then there are more charts discussing various ideas on the Millennium. Overall I think this Study Bible is worth it for the maps and charts alone. The colored graphics for the Tabernacle, Solomon's Temple, and Herod's Temple (not to mention of the city of Jerusalem) are outstanding. Even if you disagree on the some of the comments on prophecy, this would be a great reference book to have on your shelf. I thought the notes were very helpful in linking events to their historical setting.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    For most of my Christian life I have always been NIV-positive. Someone introduced the ESV Study Bible to me about a year ago and I haven't reverted back to my NIV Bible ever since. I have understood that the ESV is a revised version of the RSV and perhaps the most accurate English translation of the Bible to date. Similar to the Tyndale English Bible, it captures both the thought-for-thought and word-for-word translation better than any other English version. This study version has excellent commentary from notable Bible scholars, theologians, and seminary professors throughout the English speaking world. I highly recommend this study Bible to any Christian ready to dig deeper into God's Word.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The English Standard Version with helpful articles and running commentary on the text.The ESV is an excellent formal equivalence English translation of the Bible. It faithfully renders the words and concepts of the original texts but does so in clear and easily understood English. As such, the ESV is an excellent primary Bible for reading and preaching, and well-suited for everyday use.The study Bible has many additional resources. The quality of the maps and diagrams are superb: if you really want to get a good rendering of the installations described in Exodus, 1 Kings/2 Chronicles, and Ezekiel, the diagrams in the ESV Study Bible prove extremely helpful There are introductions to each testament, each section of books within each testament, and for each individual book; there are also articles at the beginning, between the testaments, and at the end regarding the history of the Biblical text, the theology of the OT and NT, the history of the intertestamental period, matters regarding various religions, denominations, the history of Christianity, Biblical ethics and morality, and such like. Within each book there is a running commentary at the bottom, explaining the meaning of the text in sections and verses. The ESV Study Bible also highlights literary aspects and themes present within the texts, which is most helpful.There are many great strengths to this study Bible; many of the comments are extremely good and useful for general understanding. There is an unevenness about the commentary since each book is commented upon by someone different. Occasionally a commentator will focus a bit much on a particular line of argument in a way that distracts from the text, but most of the comments are relevant and useful. On the whole, I felt the OT commentary was much stronger than the NT commentary. The OT is more even-handed; in matters regarding eschatology, multiple interpretations are suggested, and primacy is not inherently given to any particular eschatological plan. It is in the New Testament where it becomes plainly evident that the commentators are conservative Evangelicals with a Calvinist bent. For better or worse, far too many of the NT comments attempt to explain what the text is "not" saying, which can sometimes be useful but can also be problematic. Baptism is relegated to symbolic status; faith only and especially substitutionary atonement are magnified; the commentators' adherence to "once saved, always saved" is so obvious that they resort to minimizing the texts which show the challenge with such a view (Hebrews 3:12-14, 6:4-6, 10:26-31, 2 Peter 2:20-22, etc.), attempting to say that they don't say what they clearly say because of other passages that in no way deny what is being said. The commentators do recognize that multiple elders over a single congregation was the original organization of NT churches. Some commentators have more sympathy for dispensational premillennialism but it is not as prevalent as might be expected.So, as with any commentary, caveat emptor: test all things. Nevertheless, when it comes to cultural background, making general sense of the text in context (especially in the OT), maps, diagrams, and other such things, the ESV Study Bible remains a great resource and worth consideration.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    My husband gave me the ESV Study Bible as a present for our anniversary... And what a wonderful edition this is! I got the calfskin cover in Cordovan, but that's only a wonderful side note because what matters is the great translation and the study notes that I am looking forward to perusing and testing :) The print is crisp, and it is a pleasure to handle this bible. I am very happy with it!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The ESV is an excellent bible translation, accurate and yet more readable than some of its literal translation counterparts. The commentary ("study") part of this bible is excellent as well, and far more thorough than any other that I've encountered. it takes a generally conservative evangelical approach in the commentary.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I used this translation quite extensively during my study of the book of Daniel. The prose of the scriptures in this translation is quite beautiful, but there are numerous inconsistencies and historical inaccuracies within even just the book of Daniel that the commentary and footnotes either fail to properly explain, hand-wave away, or ignore altogether. I realize that this was not meant for critical studies, but it would have been nice to see at least some acknowledgment of problems with the scriptures instead of simply presenting them as infallible. After all, the bible is a religious and political volume, not a historical one.