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John R. Kohlenberger, III (1951–2015)

Auteur de The Interlinear NIV Hebrew-English Old Testament

60 oeuvres 3,165 utilisateurs 18 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de John R. Kohlenberger, III

Zondervan NIV Nave's Topical Bible (1992) 341 exemplaires
NIV Compact Concordance (1993) 186 exemplaires
Read Through the Bible in a Year (1986) 85 exemplaires
Jonah and Nahum (1984) 45 exemplaires
NIV Bible Verse Finder (2008) 38 exemplaires
The NIV triglot Old Testament (1981) 33 exemplaires
NIV Bible Concordance (2012) 17 exemplaires
NIV Compact Topical Bible Guide (1995) 6 exemplaires
KM Hebrew Dictionary 3 exemplaires
The One Minute Bible 4 Students (1993) 3 exemplaires
The NIV One-minute Bible (1996) 1 exemplaire
Passover Haggadah 1 exemplaire
Les Bibelen på ett år (1991) 1 exemplaire

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Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Kohlenberger, John R., III
Date de naissance
1951-04-06
Date de décès
2015-09-29
Sexe
male
Lieu de naissance
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Lieu du décès
Battle Ground, Washington, USA

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Critiques

On the making of books there is no end and much study wearies the body (Ecclesiaties 12:12).

When Qoheleth penned these words, he could not have imagined how many times his own prose would be copied, translated, edited and bound. On the publishing of Bibles there is no end, and Study Bibles weary the Body. There is an ever-growing number of translations to choose from (i.e. CEB, ESV, NASB, NAB, GNB, The Message, KJV, NKJV, NIV, TNIV( now deceased), NIrV, Amplified Bible, Living Bible, NLV, ISV, NKOTB, Jerusalem Bible, New Jerusalem Bible, God’s Word Translation, RSV, NRSV, and more). There are also devotional Bibles marketed to ever niche from teenage girls to used car salesman (I’m exaggerating, slightly). Study Bible’s are no better. There is a constant deluge of new study Bibles, each boasting a unique lens, approach, or aimed at a particularly age group, denomination or theological camp. The Bible is inspired but the notes seldom are. Still there are some great resources for those seeking to go deeper into the Biblical text.

Here is a Bible I think will be a beneficial for those wanting to go deeper into biblical history. The NIV Integrated Study Bible (NIVISB) presents the entire Bible in chronological order. When events are described by more than one biblical author, they appear in parallel columns (2-4). Geneologies are paralleled by then repeated later in their actual context. For example, Genesis 5, shows parallels in 1 Chronicles 1:1-4, and Luke 3:36b-38. But these also appear later in 1 Chronicles 1, and Luke 3, respectively. The effect is that the reader can see at a glance how events and people in biblical history relate to one another. This is particularly helpful in relating the history books and the prophets, or in illuminating gospel parallels. It is also helpful for navigating how some of Paul’s letters fit within Acts.

The NIVISB is edited by John R. Kohlenberger III and organized under six chronological categories: (1) Creation through the Patriarchs, (2) Conquest Through United Kingdom, (3) Divided Kingdom & Exile; (4) Return to the Land, (5) The Life of Jesus and (6) The Early Church. Additionally there are other helpful aids, like a timeline on the bottom of each page which locates the passages in the broad sweep of Biblical history, brief commentary linking transition between each era, and charts which illuminate each era. An index at the back of the Bible, aids in finding passages quickly.

Resources like this are helpful, because they do at a glance what cross references and commentaries do for us: they remind you of a passage’s place within the larger biblical story and show how different books relate together. I find this helpful. Nevertheless there are drawbacks to this format. First, it examines the Bible through a historical lens, but breaks up literary units. It is important to also read these passages in their own habitat. Second, this is the work of a New Testament scholar, giving his best guess on the chronology and timeline. Not every commentator would agree with all of Kohlenberger’s choices, though I think in the main, his timeline is quite reasonable. Third, on a practical level, those most at home in the traditional canon will have some difficulty in navigating to particular passages. But Kohlenberger doesn’t intend for this Bible to replace all others. His proposal is more modest. This is an aid for studying one aspect of scripture and helping readers grasp historical connections. He also suggests several other resources for digging into the text (conveniently all published by Zondervan).I give it four stars. ★★★★

Notice of material connection: I received this book for free from Book Look Bloggers in exchange for my honest review.
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Signalé
Jamichuk | 1 autre critique | May 22, 2017 |
I have followed some chronological Bible reading plans before, but have never used a Chronological Bible, so this is my first one and I am delighted with it. It has several timelines and also a timeline across the bottom of every page indicating what year, or approximate year, you are in at whatever point you are at in your reading. As example of how this type of Bible arrangement works: when you reach the book of Acts and are reading at the time the letter to Galatians was probably written, the book of Galatians is inserted 'into', as it were, the book of Acts and you read it as a part of the account instead of as a separate book. It is so nice not to have to keep turning back and forth every few minutes in order to read chronologically, instead you can just read right through, simply turning one page after another. When you are done, you can just place a bookmark where you stopped instead of having to mark the spot on a reading chart when you are done. So convenient!

Not only is this chronological, it also uses a parallel column format at times. For instance, since the four Gospels recount some of the same events, instead of placing them one right after another, these chronologically 'parallel' accounts are placed side by side in two, three, or even four columns. Oh, and be sure to read the introduction to this Bible first. I did not do this at first and thus had a misconception for a while that the people who arranged this Bible were fudging the chronological aspect by placing the repetition of the law that was given when Israel is finally about to enter the promised land, parallel to the first giving of the law about forty years earlier. Later on I examined their arrangement again, and found that they actually repeated this recounting of the law when it is reached at the correct time. If I had read the introduction first I would have found that they use 'conceptual parallels' and not just chronological parallels: "Conceptual parallels occur primarily in the books of Moses when similar commands and instructions are repeated in different historical settings...In order to keep genealogies and conceptual parallels in their historical setting, they are repeated whenever they appear in the chronological presentation..." Conceptual parallels are indicated by a light grey title instead of the normal solid black title.

The text of the NIV 2011 seems fine so far, though I know there has been some concern over the rendering of some verses, such as changing New Testament epistles addressed to 'brothers' as 'brothers and sisters'. I don't really like and would prefer a more literal translation, but can overlook it. Daniel Wallace(professor of New Testament Studies at Dallas Theological Seminary) has some articles on his blog critiquing the new NIV that you may find interesting. I do LOVE that they still have the footnotes that the old NIV had, regarding different renderings of verses in the Septuagint, the Dead Sea Scrolls and other manuscripts in the Old Testament and New Testament as well.

All in all, I like the format of this Bible, very convenient and interesting.

Thanks to BookSneeze® and Zondervan for sending me a free review copy of this book!(My review did not have to be favorable)
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Signalé
SnickerdoodleSarah | 1 autre critique | Apr 13, 2016 |
While this book is NOT an interlinear bible it is still an extremely useful tool for the serious student of the Hebrew and Greek languages. It is an extra important help for the student of the Greek New Testament as it makes use of Greek words not found in the New Testament.
 
Signalé
exinanition | 1 autre critique | Dec 5, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
60
Membres
3,165
Popularité
#8,070
Évaluation
4.1
Critiques
18
ISBN
78
Langues
6

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