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A Griff
Приєднався 16 тра 2014
Christ’s Heritage
Hands on Review: New Ignatius Catholic Study Bible
I review the newly released Ignatius Catholic Study Bible Old and New Testament. It is just a quick review to get oversight of the Bible to help anyone that might be considering the purchase of this study Bible. 
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Clearly a quality Bible. That said, TOO THICK, TOO BIG for me. Perhaps you former-Protestants still have you 1984 NIV Study Bible. It was one of the best-selling Bibles of all-time. Lots of good notes. Yet, it didn't weigh 50 lbs. Why can't we have a study Bible like that? I continue to be frustrated with what is available.
Looks like the type bleeds through from the opposite page. How bad is the bleed??
@@bill19441 looks worst on the video than IRL
@@ApprprtlyRecalcitrant That is good to hear.
Excellent overview! I preordered mine and am now keeping vigil at the door for the Amazon van. I got to thinking of another difference between evangelicals and Catholics: If this were an evangelical Bible, it would be marketed as "The Scott Hahn Study Bible," and "The Bishop Barron Study Bible" instead of the Word on Fire (which I see almost off-screen). Protestants John MacArthur, David Jeremiah, Tony Evans et al. all plaster their names on their Bibles, but that hasn't caught on in Catholic culture--yet (and hopefully never). Enjoyed your video!
@@g.p.ryecroft fair critique of Protestant Bible marketing. I am afraid Protestant publishers are a little more at the whim of capitalist tactics and it is unfortunate. I do not prefer these solo commentary Bibles. But not all Protestant publishers make this mistake. Take the ESV SB, the Reformation SB, or the Ancient Faith SB, or the Church History SB.
@@ApprprtlyRecalcitrant Good point. I have the Ancient Faith and the Apologetics Study Bible, so will amend my statement. I do like the old school Dake and Scofield, so guess I'm guilty of supporting a couple of those solo efforts myself. Thanks for the response!
Waiting for mine 😔
I’ve been watching lots of reviews for this Bible! I am Catholic convert and am looking for a good study Bible. This one looks very intimidating. I was looking at the Great Adventure Bible too. Would it be better to get Great AdventureBible first and then the Ignatius Bible?
Sorry to butt in since you didn't ask me, but I would say YES. I taught RCIA for a couple years and the K of C donated Great Adventure Bibles to the catechumens and they loved it. Jeff Cavins is rock solid, and if you like Fr Mike Schmitz he used it on his online read-through. Most all the catechumens were brand new to reading the Bible and it was a great entry-level Bible. BUT... be sure to step up to the Ignatius at some point and keep growing in your knowledge and love for God's Word. Blessings!
@ thank you for your input! I appreciate it. I was asking anyone who read my comment ! Hehe God Bless!
@ thank you for your input! I appreciate it. I was asking anyone who read my comment ! Hehe God Bless!
I am in RCIA currently, from protestantism, and am planning on getting this study bible. I've read some of Scott Hahn's stuff and he has quite a brilliant mind when it comes to theological study, so I trust this will be very good. Intimidating? Sure. But we have the rest of our lives to study and this study bible seems top notch for that.
The ESV Study Bible is not a Catholic Bible. It is missing 7 books of the Catholic Bible. And the wording is different in certain parts. The most complete Catholic Bible, although it is not a study Bible, is the Douay-Rheims Bible. As it was written pre-Vatican II, it does not try to adhere to Protestant dogma.
@@mlollar354 I never said the ESV Bible was a Catholic Bible. I merely referenced it for size dimensions on the occasion that a potential buyer has the ESV Bible to make a comparison.
mlollar, there is an ESV Catholic Bible called the Augustine Study Bible that restores the deuteros. I haven't seen it, but would think no matter how good it is, the Ignatius will trump it and all other pretenders to the throne.
@@g.p.ryecroft There is the ESV-CE published by SPCK.
Peter Kreeft still recommends the RSV CE not the 2CE.
I prefer the 2nd CE. It removes the archaic language (thee, thy, thou, etc.) which I find clumsy.
@@acardnalbut sometimes it’s useful to distinguish plural or singular you
Plural or singular "you" can be determined by the context. At least I can.
@@acardnal but sometimes the context not in the same verse, that's why people always abuse some verses to confused the weaklings
The Revised Standard Version (Catholic Edition) is among the absolute best study Bibles that there is! And I say this even though I am not a Catholic!! Needless to say, I have one!
@@markpalka6382 I've got the Ignatius Press Didache edition which cross references the CCC.
At age 64, I'm still watching Bible review videos, although I am much more selective now when it comes to print bibles. I have the ESV as a kindle book. The Reformed / Calvinist Study Bible I prefer to own as a print book is the Reformation Heritage Study Bible because of the Reformed Creeds and Confessions. I also own the Concordia Lutheran Study Bible as opposed to the on published by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. For Catholic bibles, currently I own the Didache Study Bible (RSV2CE) and the New Catholic Bible. However, between Scott Hahn's videos, the over view video by Convinced Catholicism, I can see that I want the Ignatius Study Bible Old and New Testament as a print book. Dr. Scott Hahn's scholarship is Spot Hahn! I know, that one was a groaner! 🙂 I use my Catholic Study Bibles and the Orthodox Study Bible together when doing Bible Study, along with a simple NKJV text bible because of the textual notes, which gives the differences between the main text families, such as Texture Receptus, Majority Text, Latin Vulgate, LXX, Samaritan Penteteuch, DEA Sea Scrolls and etc. I also have an old Jerusalem Bible with study notes and a Thompson Chain Reference KJV Bible from back in the day. I think it is a good thing to have study bibles representing various schools of thought. Thanks for the overview of the new Ignatius Study Bible.
I collect Bibles but unfortunately, i dont read them that much. May the Holy spirit gives me the wisdom and motivation to read
Fellow fan of Convinced Catholicism here. If you appreciate study Bibles representing various schools of thought, I recommend the Dake Study Bible. It is Dispensational (like Scofield on steroids) and Pentecostal and is just a wealth of fascinating reading. It is KJV. I have a lot of Study Bibles, but none that you mentioned, so I've got some homework to do (but pushing 60, I really don't need to expand my collection! :-). Blessings.
I have ordered a copy of the bible via Amazon.
I would so love to have this copy here in the Philippines but I am not sure if this will be available and soon. This will be very useful for my weekly bible study 😢
I used to sell in Lazada Barrons WOF Bible. I ordered in bulk (like 10) i keep 1 for myself and sell the rest in order to recover the shipping fee. I sold it at almost same price as sold in US. But because i bought in bulk i got a discount. Now i am in Saudi Arabia so i discontinued selling other volumes. Maybe i wilL do again for this Bible when i got home.
Does this Bible treat Genesis as a historical book from the beginning?
Probably not, seeing as how the catholic perspective of that book has a more metaphorical view
@ That is not the Traditional Catholic view. I follow the Church fathers not the noval modern view. All of the fathers treated it as historical. The modern view destroys faith.
@@ao19776they treated some parts as historical and some parts as metaphorical, you’ll have to be more specific on what you mean by genesis being historical
@ The six day creation account. Genesis 1 and 2. Modern day people try to say it is poetry ect. and that you don’t really have to believe it. I reject this. One, a plain reading of the text shows that is not poetry or a metaphor like the book of wisdom or like a parable. Two, the fathers always said it was historical and written in the style of history. They all read it in a literal way. I have a douay Rhiems Bible with Haydock commentary and regularly use the church fathers and doctors of the Church when reading the Bible. I don’t subscribe to the modern noval view of things. I really don’t want a study Bible calls into question my faith.
@@ao19776 I also enjoy the Haydock Douay-Rheims, which as you know holds to the true Catholic faith before the disasters of Vatican II (to paraphrase Fr William Jenkins). I am also a Catholic 6-day-young-earth creationist despite modernist apologists like Jimmy Akin attacking YECs and despite Scott Hahn reimagining Genesis 1 as some ancient poem prefiguring the Mass (an ill-conceived flight of fancy at best).
Thanks for the brief review. This publication is not available in the UK until 22 December 2024. So, the waiting continues! 😊👍
I’m obsessed with watching reviews of this Bible.
I just got mine, its a motherlode, maybe 20 lbs
@ Wow! Since it’s so big, how do you intend on using it? I understand it’s intended use, but is it practical to carry, etc.,? Have you tabbed it, yet? I want to see a what it looks like. I want to use the Story of Salvation Timeline Tabs from Asencion Center. I think it calls for that type of system given the amount of resources this new version has. Thoughts?
Mine just shipped!
@@rpmgrlca Ah! Exciting! 👏👏
Same 😂
How is something this long in development- this badly constructed? I have the leather edition… it has uncut pages, glued in signatures (that’s the individual sections of pages) super thin cheap “leather”, no gilt, no bookmarks… it’s absolutely the worst made Bible I own. It will fall apart with heavy use, and that’s an absolute shame. What’s inside, while pedestrian and very plain looking, is wonderful. They could learn a LOT from ascension press and their new premium.
@@benallen5967I am sorry that has been your experience. I will say the glue issues and the uncut pages is not what I have experienced from my copy. Mine overall is very well constructed. Perhaps you can email for an exchange for a better copy? I will say, though I have had and do own several premium additions of the scriptures and when you’re talking about premium Bibles with the best of leather, paper, construction you’re talking several hundred dollars, namely an Allan Bible. So given my experience with those I find it is very well constructed at the price point it has.
@@benallen5967 is the leather edition, bonded leather, or a more supple, more expensive piece of leather?
@@ApprprtlyRecalcitrant I also own an Allan, as well as Schuyler Bibles, and others.. but I'm referring to the fact that this Bible, has glued in signatures (not sewn). For the difference in price of this vs the new Ascension Press Great Adventure Catholic Study Bible - even the basic edition.. this is just bad. A book this large will absolutely fall apart with much use when it is made this badly. Please notice that I'm not disparaging the contents at all - Absolutely not, and I am a protestant!
I am very surprised and disappointed to note your comments on the quality.
👍🏽
Thanks. Would you comment on the notes? Is it with updated scholarship
@@adrianng2280 This is something I cannot speak to directly right now as I have never possessed the single NT edition. Perhaps, if you have a specific verse I can check and advise what the notes say.
How are the introductory notes on Pentateuch? I'm not buying another Bible that tells me Moses didn't write it. Ditto Isaiah and the dating of Daniel
I’ll post the photos on the community page of my channel if I can. It appears to explain the traditional view on the matter first and then explains the modern scholarship on the matter. And says it’s muddy and it may be too broad and sweeping to make the claim that they all were written by Moses or to say they all were not. But they lean with the traditional view.
@@leepatterson5842 see above
We really made it this far. Absolutely based.
Thank you for this
Thanks much for this!