2024年4月27日星期六

[Kindle] 50 World Changing Events in Christian History

  • For those who took Church History, this is a good one refreshing those memories...
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2024年4月4日星期四

5 Things a Pastor Should Consider When Using a Commentary

 re-posted here

5 Things a Pastor Should Consider When Using a Commentary

Pastors today have access to countless resources and commentaries to help aid in their preparation, but that raises the question how should a pastor use a commentary?

Faithfully preaching God’s word week in and week out is a weighty task for the pastor. Thankfully pastors today have access to countless resources and commentaries to help aid in their preparation, but that raises the question how should a pastor use a commentary? While so much of answering this question will depend on the specific circumstances of each pastor’s ministry, here are five things I believe all pastors should consider when using commentaries in their sermon preperation:

1) Do Your Work First

When using a commentary, it is important you make sure you do your own work first. I found it to be true both in my writing and sermon preparation, that if you go to a commentary right away or other sources, you can lose your own voice and you’re at the mercy of what other people have said. It is important that you think through the text yourself before turning to a commentary. I would recommend as a general rule you write out our put your sermon together, putting together the points of your sermon before you look at a commentary.

Of course, there may be times that you find it helpful to consult a commentary. Perhaps you are so confused that you have no idea what’s going on, and then maybe a commentary would help. But I think typically you should do your own work first. This goes for application as well. Pastors should first think of their own congregation and how the text applies to them and only after giving it some though consult a commentary. After completing writing my sermon I will often consult another commentary.

2) Read Commentaries to Consider Other Perspectives

I think the main benefit a commentary provides a pastor is that commentaries help pastors see other perspectives that they didn’t consider before. I’ve experienced this as I’ve been working on my commentary on the book of Ephesians. My process for writing a commentary is to first write the first draft using the Greek text alone. Then after writing it out, I read other commentaries and often find myself saying, “I didn’t think about that interpretation.” The benefit of commentaries is that we’re all limited and partial, and a good commentary will reflect the history of interpretation for 2000 years. So, you’re benefiting from all of those who have preceded us in interpreting the text.

3) Select Good Commentaries

My bias is that pastors would consult more scholarly commentaries. I think you can learn from commentaries written by pastors, but when think about using commentaries, scholarly works should be preferred. Not because they are necessarily better, but because they have read, processed, sifted, thought through the work of many scholars. At the same time, such commentators have also read monographs and scholarly articles. All of this provides a lot of depth for the pastor to consider. I’ve put together a list of some of my favorite commentaries here.

4) Give Yourself Enough Time

Pastors should try to give themselves enough time to consult several commentaries in order to gain from the different perspectives offered. As I mentioned, I’m working on writing a  commentary on Ephesians, and I’m on my 10th or 11th commentary and there are still things I am learning. So giving yourself time to consult multiple commentaries if possible (it isn’t always possible!!) can shed light on a passage or give a new argument or another angle on it that I always find helpful.

5) Commentaries Can’t Answer Everything

Sometimes I’ve had people complain to me, “the commentaries don't answer the questions I have.” I am sympathetic to that, but also know that everyone who writes a commentary can’t answer everything. You’re constrained. There’s always a lot more to say on everything and every commentary, including my own, has strengths and weaknesses. So pastors should read every commentary with discernment because no commentary is perfect or can answer every question. And one reason it’s good to read more than one because different commentaries have different strengths.

Thomas R. Schreiner
James Buchanan Harrison Professor of New Testament Interpretation and Professor of Biblical Theology

Thomas R. Schreiner is the James Buchanan Harrison Professor of New Testament Interpretation and Professor of Biblical Theology at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary where he also serves as associate dean of the School of Theology.

 |  Faculty Bio  |  Other posts

Recommended Commentaries by Schreiner and Rolfing Library staff

  • Rolfing’s recommended commentary lists – Old TestamentNew Testament. (Rolfing Library is the library of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, USA) 

2024年4月2日星期二

How to select and save most for the current Logos Packages & Feature expansion deals

Up to 25% Off Logos 10 Packages


Discover how the right Bible study resources and tools make all the difference in the Word, only until May 1.

Feature Expansions | Up to 40% Off

Boost the results from your favorite Logos features with handpicked resources to fuel them up. Available in S, M, or L bundles.

 

****     ****     ****

  • There are many goodies if you dig into the two pages above. It depends on how much you already owned in your library. Remember to join the Academic Discount program first (it is for current seminarians only)! (Also, if you don't login the Logos page, you won't see your customized price)
  • Let me show you how: 
    • always choose a cheap package to look around. Say I chose the Logos 10 Starter
    • scroll to the section "Library Resources"
    • tick "Hide owned books"
    • then see if the books are what you'd like to have. For example, for Logos 10 Starter, I find How to Read Daniel by Tremper Longman III (IVP Academic, 2020) useful to me, it costs HK$94 to be bought separately. 
    • But look! The entire starter package is just HK$56.57 (the price varies depending on what you owned)   

 


 

I can do the same for feature expansion

I choose "New Testament Studies Library Expansion, S", I like Introduction to the New Testament: Contexts, Methods, and Ministry Formation, 2nd ed. By David A. deSilva (HK$234.66). The other books are not bad to me. 

But look, the S expansion costs only HK$298.04:


[Kindle sale] Goldingay's Complete Old Testament for Everyone (US$5.99)

 good for quiet time meditation ...