КОМЕНТАРІ •

  • @lt.boltzmann4116
    @lt.boltzmann4116 6 років тому +599

    Hi I just saw your channel and it is an absolute gold mine. I was looking for christian channels but most of them are cheesy and cringry but your content is like a needle in the haystack.

    • @MattWhitmanTMBH
      @MattWhitmanTMBH 6 років тому +58

      Well that's the nicest thing anybody's said to me all day Joshua. Thanks man. I hope you enjoy the rest of the content.

    • @shirleygoss1988
      @shirleygoss1988 5 років тому +8

      The Ten Minute Bible Hour I’m just curious, have you ever looked into the Orthodox Study Bible?

    • @SM-JIL
      @SM-JIL 5 років тому

      @@shirleygoss1988 - I have it :)

    • @shirleygoss1988
      @shirleygoss1988 5 років тому

      S M That' good. What do you think of it?

    • @WatchmanofMKDN
      @WatchmanofMKDN 5 років тому +4

      Joshua Castillo
      A certain group or groups of people have even used the bible as a means of claiming history for another nation.
      In the book of Daniel, where he mentions Alexander the king of Macedonia, in English modern version bibles it says he was the “king of Greece” or “the king of the Greeks”
      Daniel never wrote about Alexander as the king of Greece, he wrote in his original text as “The king of Javan”
      That’s why modern teachings say “Javan” refered to the Greeks, and it says that in English version historical accounts, but Javan actually referred to Macedon or Macedonia.
      When Daniel wrote his book he referred to Alexander as
      “The king of Javan” meaning
      “The king of the Macedonians”
      In the book of Jasher, by the Jewish historian, which is referenced in the books of Samuel and Joshua, Jasher in his book in chapter 13 verse 10 says;
      “And the children of Javan are the Javanim, who dwell in the land of makedonia”
      And we know from true history and the New Testament and all maps for over 2000 years that Macedonia and Greece and Macedonians and Greeks are 2 separate people and nations.
      I know it may not be a big thing about the bible, but the bible shouldn’t be used by anyone for propaganda and theft of history!!!

  • @matthewmartin7639
    @matthewmartin7639 4 роки тому +282

    My father has been using the John MacArthur NKJV study Bible for as long as I can remember. When I graduated from high school he gifted me with my own copy. But he had gone through it, page by page from Genesis to Revelation, and transcribed BY HAND every single note he had ever written in his. Every verse he ever highlighted. Every part of the commentary he thought was important enough to highlight. Then wrote me a note in the front saying to read it, study it, breathe it, live it, and always look there for any answer to any question I may have. So I have the word of God, the thoughts of one of the best (in my stupid humble opinion ;)) theologians in modern day Christianity...and my fathers notes. It is so much more than a study Bible to me. To this day that is the bible I take everywhere. It is my "burning house" item.

    • @tannerbuckley2037
      @tannerbuckley2037 3 роки тому +10

      I am very partial to my NKJV study Bibe from MacArthur. I really like it. Your father is a great man, this is something that I am doing for my son as well, he is only 7 but now that I read how impactful it is, I will make sure I finish the task.

    • @fonhollohan2908
      @fonhollohan2908 3 роки тому +12

      I have to say your so bless to have a father who has invested into your life as much as your father has. I don't necessarily agree with a lot of John MacArthur views but I do love the njkv. Its one of my all time favorite translations.

    • @AimeeHope89
      @AimeeHope89 2 роки тому +9

      That is so beautiful! You are so blessed to have a father so full of love for you ❤

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      I agree...... I started using this bible in 2002.. and used it all the way up to 2006 or so when I switched to the KJV.. I now use Falwells... Nelsons KJV study bible.. and that is my Burning house bible..... well ok.. I may carry out the MacArthur NKJV as well if I can fit both of them in my arms with the screaming baby...

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому +1

      I actually gifted my daughter a NKJV Believers Study Bible..previously known as The Criswell Study Bible" Genuine Leather Black ...when she graduated.. from Bible college.. back in 2005...

  • @bjh13us
    @bjh13us 6 років тому +416

    Respect for covering Bibles of a different theological tradition than your own in a positive manner.

    • @WatchmanofMKDN
      @WatchmanofMKDN 5 років тому +10

      Benjamin Handelman
      A certain group or groups of people have even used the bible as a means of claiming history for another nation.
      In the book of Daniel, where he mentions Alexander the king of Macedonia, in English modern version bibles it says he was the “king of Greece” or “the king of the Greeks”
      Daniel never wrote about Alexander as the king of Greece, he wrote in his original text as “The king of Javan”
      That’s why modern teachings say “Javan” refered to the Greeks, and it says that in English version historical accounts, but Javan actually referred to Macedon or Macedonia.
      When Daniel wrote his book he referred to Alexander as
      “The king of Javan” meaning
      “The king of the Macedonians”
      In the book of Jasher, by the Jewish historian, which is referenced in the books of Samuel and Joshua, Jasher in his book in chapter 13 verse 10 says;
      “And the children of Javan are the Javanim, who dwell in the land of makedonia”
      And we know from true history and the New Testament and all maps for over 2000 years that Macedonia and Greece and Macedonians and Greeks are 2 separate people and nations.
      I know it may not be a big thing about the bible, but the bible shouldn’t be used by anyone for propaganda and theft of history!!!

    • @adude9442
      @adude9442 5 років тому +4

      What he does is good because even if their is one actual truth, someone needed to do this unbiased

    • @napper8879
      @napper8879 5 років тому +4

      @@WatchmanofMKDN One only needs to study classical history to understand the place of Alexander the Great in world history. Alexander was the King of Macedon, his father Phillip united the Greek city states. Macedon was a Kingdom within the Hellenic world just as Sparta was. To speak of Alexander as King of the Greeks would have been accepted as accurate in his day. Alexander was quoted by his own teacher Aristotle on numerous occasions making it clear he was Hellenic. Many of Alexander's speeches started with the sentence "We Hellenic peoples"................It is more than obvious that the culture of the people of Macedon was Hellenic, look at the Hellenic cultural influence across the east due to Alexander's conquests. To say otherwise is akin to stating that George Bush is Texan not American. So was Bush a President of the American people or the Texans?
      ..and for you to state that Ancient peoples that lived in Macedon were not Hellenic is wrong!
      BTW I am not of Greek background.

    • @Kylemathews1
      @Kylemathews1 4 роки тому +5

      @@Ali-ei8po Vatican is Satanic, just look at the Pope's audience hall. Looks like a snake

    • @robertedwards909
      @robertedwards909 4 роки тому +2

      There's an orthodox study Bible also

  • @charliexoxox
    @charliexoxox 5 років тому +155

    You missed out on those cringey “cool” teen study bibles!

    • @trishahamrick7062
      @trishahamrick7062 4 роки тому +8

      I wore out two NIV Student Bibles; when I was in my teens. Now I look back at it and wonder what I was thinking.

    • @sorenpx
      @sorenpx 4 роки тому +36

      @Trisha Hamrick Why? You were a teen. It makes sense those Bibles appealed to you at the time. They were designed to.

    • @dmgdguds7563
      @dmgdguds7563 4 роки тому +3

      I had one called "The Rock". I loved it and wish I still had it. I think my parents sold it or gave it away.

    • @AarmOZ84
      @AarmOZ84 4 роки тому +11

      I had one of those! Mine had notes that read like a 50 year old talking like how they thought 14 year olds sounded. It got an A+ for going the extra cringe mile!

    • @joshchambers4968
      @joshchambers4968 4 роки тому +7

      Extreme teen study bible was what I used when I was a kid.

  • @wendy2cc
    @wendy2cc 5 років тому +330

    I love my Thompson Chain. First one I ever got was when I was a fairly new Christian over 30 years ago. They were expensive and I really wanted one but at the time it didn't fit the budget. I was driving down the road and there in the middle of the road I saw a book flapping in the wind. It looked like a bible so we pulled over and to my amazement it was a Thompson Chain Reference study bible. I call it my miracle Bible lol.

    • @popertop
      @popertop 5 років тому +59

      God is so cool for doing that

    • @wendy2cc
      @wendy2cc 5 років тому +25

      @@popertop yes He is!

    • @johnhaslett6714
      @johnhaslett6714 5 років тому +11

      Yeah. I have a friend who loves them as well. I bought one for a brother in Christ.

    • @wendy2cc
      @wendy2cc 5 років тому +6

      I just received a new one for my birthday last year after all these years.

    • @amypattie7004
      @amypattie7004 5 років тому +6

      I was looking for a review of Thompson Chain Reference. This is perfect and I take this as a reconnection!

  • @joshuazampella8542
    @joshuazampella8542 5 років тому +206

    You have one of the best Christian channels on youtube.

    • @MattWhitmanTMBH
      @MattWhitmanTMBH 5 років тому +19

      That means a lot.

    • @reigenlucilfer6154
      @reigenlucilfer6154 4 роки тому +2

      i agree! keep up the good work. you have my full support.

    • @Maradudin
      @Maradudin 4 роки тому +4

      It's because the anchorman is so lively!

    • @iannnebbe4789
      @iannnebbe4789 3 роки тому

      I would dare to say one of the best channels out of all of 'em.

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      @@iannnebbe4789 Pastor Steve Waldron's are very good as well and very informative.. But I am not too fond of " A Frisch Perspective".. as he advocates a lot of bibles as being ok to use.. I think his latest preference was NASB...

  • @shrewdthewise2840
    @shrewdthewise2840 5 років тому +149

    I thought maybe I was the only one who took into account the smell of a Bible when determining how much I like it. 😂

    • @allancuseo7431
      @allancuseo7431 4 роки тому +2

      Me too

    • @naomi.s1799
      @naomi.s1799 4 роки тому +8

      *sniff sniff* the word is strong in this one

    • @beccaann6866
      @beccaann6866 4 роки тому +1

      Well idk about you but I don’t have any more christian book stores in my area for me to smell the Bible before I buy it :/ so that sucks.

    • @dollymadison2397
      @dollymadison2397 4 роки тому

      Oh wow!!! One of MEEEE!!!

    • @Heaven_Leigh702
      @Heaven_Leigh702 2 роки тому

      I just smelled mine this morning. 😂

  • @ohmightywez
    @ohmightywez 4 роки тому +16

    I always appreciate your videos and the level of research and respect with which you approach each topic.
    I’m Catholic, a catechist, which in Protestant language means Sunday School and Bible Study combined I suppose. lol but with the added requirements of teaching the reasons why we do what we do and believe as we believe.
    My daughter is a junior in college, far away from home. She went through her adjustment period where she didn’t go to church, ignored her inner life, etc. She didn’t go crazy, but she was free from her scheduled religious activities and among tons of people who didn’t believe at all, etc.
    In the past year she was challenged by a couple of friends who are very faithful evangelical Christians and she found she was seriously out of practice with her apologetics.
    She started going to UA-cam and watching channel after channel, atheists, agnostics, Protestants of the doctrinal variety and evangelicals. She got her Bible out and did some serious flipping back and forth, note taking, page flagging. She is back at Church and has had her own rebirth of Faith.
    About a year ago, right about started watching your channel, I got a text from her telling me I should watch Ten Minute Bible Hour. We had even had the same video come up in our recommendations. lol.
    I enjoy your whole series, I definitely enjoy your exploration of other Christian churches and faith families. We as Catholics have a deep love for the orthodox churches, so I especially enjoyed that video. There are some orthodox churches that have reunited with the Catholic Church so one of my teachers in high school was a Catholic priest in the Byzantine Rite, married with 5 kids.
    God bless you and your beautiful family and keep up the good work.

    • @prepperjonpnw6482
      @prepperjonpnw6482 2 роки тому

      I teach RCIA at my parish so I tend to stick with Catholic Bibles when I give a recommendation to people. Having said that I also have quite the collection of protestant Bibles from my days of wandering away from the Church. I really like one called The Founders Bible. It is filled with commentary from our founding fathers and shows which verses and sections of the Bible influenced them as they created our nation. I prefer the RSV-CE from Ignatius press for everyday reading. Cheers

  • @jonnytex117
    @jonnytex117 6 років тому +48

    Also want to commend you on how you are cutting your video now. You've gotten way better at this! I totally mean that as a compliment, man. Great polish on this video.

    • @XSquibX
      @XSquibX 5 років тому

      @KnightOfTheKing Video unavailable =/

    • @langwaydpful
      @langwaydpful 3 роки тому

      I loved the slide whistle accompanying each graphic

  • @MapBot11
    @MapBot11 6 років тому +176

    Definitely not Matt's mom here. Thumbs up to this video.

    • @maxonmendel5757
      @maxonmendel5757 5 років тому +3

      Is that just a running joke? I think in his video about the Psuediographic books, he says "I have an internet think that my mom watches half a dozen times so listen to me" s/
      Lol

    • @MusicBlik
      @MusicBlik 5 років тому +6

      @@maxonmendel5757 It's definitely a running joke. In both his early material here and in the "No Dumb Questions" podcast, Matt has asserted that every one of his youtube views comes from his mother. Sure, it's self-deprecating humor, but never too overt because he doesn't play it too hard.

    • @zayan6284
      @zayan6284 5 років тому +2

      How can you be matts mom if I'm his dad?

  • @suzical_the_musical
    @suzical_the_musical 4 роки тому +34

    Interesting video. Amazed at the many judgmental comments! I started reading the Bible recently for the first time and am enjoying my NIV. Not sure where I will go to next but nice to know there are options.

    • @muffmallory5934
      @muffmallory5934 3 роки тому +3

      NIV is a good Bible to begin with. I read NT seven times before I started on the OT. One of the best experiences of my life. ❤️

    • @JohnDoe-wt9ek
      @JohnDoe-wt9ek 2 роки тому +1

      I think its strictly the KJV crowd, and the fact that the NIV does make a bit of liberty with adding a word or modernizing a term that many modern English speakers cannot understand (which, to both I think it really doesn't matter). Even more so that the entire process of its culmination seems well steeped in trial and error to ensure proper authority to the original manuscripts, without being overbearing in the KJV standard, but also not losing the potency of the scriptures as they were and keeping the truth of the gospel intact...
      To be honest, I think its just KJV crowd not liking their lack of monopoly of Bible translation and getting upset with anyone and everyone who reads anything that is a little more palatable to literary tastes outside of the Old English textual form found in KJV (which turns a lot of people off to the Bible in such a translation).

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому +1

      @@JohnDoe-wt9ek If you want to see exactly what are the issues with the NIV translation.. please pick up a copy of "Look What's Missing".. by Davud W. Daniels.... it's a real eye opener../// I guarantee you will Not feel the same regarding the NIV after you read it...

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому +1

      @@JohnDoe-wt9ek also... though there may be some who are KJV only users.. for no reason that they can think of except to be biased toward one translation... there are plenty like me that have done extensive studying and long hours of comparisons.. between the KJV and the modern translations... such as the NASB... NKJV... NIV... ESV.. RSV.... ASV... ERC... NSRV...the Message.... the Voice... and a few others.. that can definitely point out examples as to why the KJV is the strongest translation... read "LOOK WHAT'S MISSING".. by David W. Daniels.. his book lists and explains the causes and effects of over 200 missing or changed words and what damage or misrepresentation those changes caused... across 47 different modern bible versions...

  • @duhbghaill9306
    @duhbghaill9306 5 років тому +4

    Watched this last night, while half asleep. Had to watch it again today to make sure I caught it all! Good video!

  • @jongeiser7569
    @jongeiser7569 6 років тому +70

    I absolutely love your philosophically of presenting information but letting think for themselvesand being okay with not agreeing with them. I also agree it's important to know the slight nuances when going into a study Bible. Great video!

    • @EmethMatthew
      @EmethMatthew 6 років тому +2

      Definitely greatly appreciated

    • @johnpike5836
      @johnpike5836 4 роки тому

      opinions and inanimate objects or your dog are not things u need to love.
      u can "appreciate" an opinion or really like your car or doggy.
      sorry for my cultural deference. I Europe if u stated that u love your dog or your car, folks would Get Up and put some serious distance between y'all. it's Pagan.

    • @Ryklenkramer
      @Ryklenkramer 2 роки тому

      @@johnpike5836 you don’t love your dog? You don’t love the world around you?

    • @johnpike5836
      @johnpike5836 2 роки тому

      @@Ryklenkramer wow...did that comment a while ago?
      westerners us the term Love (as in "I love my can / I love my wife) interchangeble) (PS dont forget to correct my spelling because when Westerners lack content in a reply, they like to correct grammer and typos)
      OH...sprry; you LOVE to do that...
      We CARE for our pets better than you and use the notion of LOVE discreetly. Had more dogs than most Of You have had hot means.
      But I took exception to the application of Loving.
      Bit of course u Woke Folks never hesitate to Make judgement on folks u dont know.

    • @Ryklenkramer
      @Ryklenkramer 2 роки тому

      @@johnpike5836 I never judged you. I asked you two simple questions. Now you’ve answered them, thank you. I understand that we use the term “love” differently lol. The only one being judgmental in this situation is YOU. Bold of you to assume that Americans don’t take care of their pets. The US is a big place there is a huge variety of “Americans” there is no universal standard of being American just as there is none for Europeans. I’d urge you to sit down and take a look at your attitude before you try and act holier than thou. Have a great day, John.

  • @MireyaRivera
    @MireyaRivera 6 років тому +4

    I currently use the Harper Collins Study Bible. I settled on this one for now because I asked my sister - who got her masters from a seminary - which one she recommended. And it was that one. But, when I'm ready to invest in a new Bible, I'll definitely be referencing back to this and the other related videos to help me make a more informed decision.
    Thanks for all the information!

  • @fredharvey2720
    @fredharvey2720 4 роки тому +16

    I LOVE the Thompson Chain Reference! Unbelievable! The categorical study helps and book outlines are UNMATCHED.

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому +1

      @Fred Harvey... if you like Thompsons ... have you ever tried a Dake's...?.... it has a ton of notes as well.. Dake's uses a lot of lists... like 7 ways for this or 10 ways for that.. etc.. in it's ref. notes... good teaching tools...

  • @SgtPwnVids
    @SgtPwnVids 5 років тому +5

    your very non biased approach to these reviews is something to be appreciated. I got recommended this when i was watching philosophy videos and just kept watching because you are great at what you do :)

    • @MattWhitmanTMBH
      @MattWhitmanTMBH 5 років тому +3

      I'm very appreciative you decided to stick around. Thanks for watching this stuff!

  • @elizabethchatfield695
    @elizabethchatfield695 4 роки тому +13

    I took Koine Greek in college and have since read from Jay P Green's Interlinear Greek/English NT. And, boy....how different other translations can be from a "word to word" literal one! Thanks for sharing with us:)))

    • @VicRibeiro777
      @VicRibeiro777 4 роки тому

      The problem is (and knowing Koine Greek, you can attest to this) when you come to figures of speech.
      If you translate it woodenly literally, it could end up making no sense to your target audience.
      Idioms can't be translated literally unless your target audience is informed what the idiom means.

    • @ambassadorforchrist2Corin
      @ambassadorforchrist2Corin 4 роки тому +1

      Just get your KJV already

  • @danadams3465
    @danadams3465 4 роки тому +20

    The life application study bible has helped a lot of new believers in their walk with God.

  • @andrewvorhees4033
    @andrewvorhees4033 4 роки тому

    Great channel! Your videos are concise with just the right amount of content. (I imagine that’s a tough balancing act.) Plus, I enjoy your fair and complementary perspective on other faith traditions as well.
    Keep the content coming! Thanks brother, I’m definitely hooked.

  • @calbo1954
    @calbo1954 4 роки тому +1

    I appreciate your honest caveats about your preferences and theology. Great Channel and very informative for someone seeking info on the various study bibles

  • @jonnytex117
    @jonnytex117 6 років тому +4

    Matt, just noticed your new gear. Also noticed way fewer booms coming out of my subwoofer. Great upgrade!

    • @MattWhitmanTMBH
      @MattWhitmanTMBH 6 років тому +1

      Awesome! The high pass filter has become part of the finalizing routine; glad to hear it's working.

  • @noahwilhelm9201
    @noahwilhelm9201 6 років тому +5

    If I ever need a new study bible after the one I have now becomes unusable (although it has been through so much over the years, so it is surprising that I still have it in good shape), I’m definitely coming back to this video. Great video as usual, and I hope you’re enjoying the sabbatical!

    • @anaanguiano6658
      @anaanguiano6658 5 років тому

      Excuse me you write and highlight your bible? Thank you

    • @prepperjonpnw6482
      @prepperjonpnw6482 2 роки тому

      Have a look at the Founders Bible. It is truly enlightening about how our founding fathers used the Bible to create our country (USA). That and the Didache Bible are great.

  • @IXMBEANOS
    @IXMBEANOS 4 роки тому

    Recently subscribed and love your content brother, it’s amazing to find fellow believers who actually have good theology and know history. 👍🏼

  • @dam1371
    @dam1371 4 роки тому +15

    This is why the word says study to show yourself approved rightly dividing the word of truth

  • @robbit89
    @robbit89 5 років тому +8

    Good reviews! When we bought our son's first study Bible, one of the simple features that we really appreciated was that the study articles had a background color and were formatted to visually separate them from the Scripture text. It helped us teach our kids that the Scripture is God's word but the study notes are someone else's opinion. They can be helpful, but we must be careful not to view them as having the same authority.

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      which Bible was that?...

    • @robbit89
      @robbit89 2 роки тому

      @@jeffcarlson3269 That was many years ago. I don't remember the specific title, just that it was a Zondervan NIV youth/teen study Bible of some sort. I mainly liked that it visually separated commentary from scripture as I've seen some young people mistake the study notes and commentaries for Scripture.

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      @@robbit89 yes I remember buying the teen study bibles for my kids as well.. I think theirs were life application ones.. I do not remember the translations.. but that is one thing I noted as well the seperation of commentary from scripture.. usually by different colors and shapes... they... had geometric designs... encapsulating the side devotions or comments...

  • @georgelogreco8810
    @georgelogreco8810 4 роки тому +28

    My favorite is the Key Word Hebrew Geeek study bible. You can look up original language words with meanings and idioms.

    • @olabashanda
      @olabashanda 3 роки тому +1

      I totally agree. Except his commentary is awful re: miracles and such, he was clearly a skeptic (who died prematurely from his health issues). Tragic.

    • @georgelogreco8810
      @georgelogreco8810 3 роки тому

      @@olabashanda rarely pay much attention to commentaries. Interesting to see approximate dates.

    • @deanmoore1752
      @deanmoore1752 2 роки тому +1

      My mom gave me mine when I was 18. I'm 53 now, and it's been to camp a dozen times, been read to thousands of teens, was preached out of in folsom prison, and is now held together with duct tape. I have dozens of bibles, I don't preach out of it anymore, but it's definitely been a big help to me and thousands of teens over the years. Now it's in semi-retirement next to my easy chair. This was a fun video...

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      I used that one for a short while..... I shelfed it years ago.. still have it somewhere...

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому +1

      @@georgelogreco8810 date in regards to what?.. when the commentaries were published...?.. cuz ...if you're looking for a commentary when dates happened in the bible.. No two commentarries.. agree.. however some Do fall back on Ussher;s.. date of 4004 B.C. as the time of creation.. even Scofield.. I think Calvin may as well...

  • @brytelyte7088
    @brytelyte7088 5 років тому +16

    Great Work Bro.
    I also think people should try *THE HOLY SPIRIT STUDY GUIDE*
    Where do you find one?
    In you

    • @adude9442
      @adude9442 5 років тому +1

      I'll admit he's good, possibly great at these videos, hey I'd even say fantastic!
      But I have not heard of his theological differences in teachings of scripture. But he does handle these in a loving way so thats the Holy spirit working in him.

    • @merrillschannel
      @merrillschannel 4 роки тому +1

      I was thinking the same thing. Thank you holy spirit that leads and guides us into all truth.

  • @bikeninja956
    @bikeninja956 3 роки тому

    your channel is really good. Keep it up, I learn a lot watching it!

  • @LynnJynh9315
    @LynnJynh9315 4 роки тому +16

    There's also an Orthodox Study Bible (in English). Gf uses it.

    • @HerveyShmervy
      @HerveyShmervy 3 роки тому

      Too bad it's the only orthodox Bible translation

    • @bentond3889
      @bentond3889 3 роки тому +2

      @@HerveyShmervy it is the only study Bible translation for Orthodox is English but not the only Orthodox translation. The OSB is based on a translation of the LXX for the OT and the NKJV for the NT. there is also the ESB version, which is New Testament only, and specifically translated by Orthodox. Also, there is the Catena Bible App which is heavily resourced with the teaching of the church Father and includes a Greek and a Coptic lectionary. Unfortunately it is an app only

    • @HerveyShmervy
      @HerveyShmervy 3 роки тому

      @@bentond3889 thanks for the info!

    • @bentond3889
      @bentond3889 3 роки тому +2

      @@HerveyShmervy my pleasure. I also just discovered the “Ancient Faith Bible” which is essentially a CSB translation with heavy notations from church fathers. I understand it’s weakness is that is is pretty Protestant-oriented and, therefore, does not include deuterocanonical books and, in some areas does not include the full range of notes available but the notes that are there are from the the church fathers and , therefore, it may be a good resource… I haven’t checked it out personally, but will soon.

  • @jgoble100
    @jgoble100 5 років тому +7

    I loved the background music. Super nostalgic.

  • @pjf2675
    @pjf2675 6 років тому

    I was introduced to the NIV Quest study bible. It has helped me a lot in understanding more of the full Bible's meanings and relationship with other books in the Bible. But what has helped me more is the weekly Bible study at my church. Thanks Matt - always the best video of my week.

  • @fredacuneo5180
    @fredacuneo5180 4 роки тому

    I really like how you up the whole topic with referencing the two economics books. I really liked the way you presented the material in a really down to earth way.

  • @stalemateib3600
    @stalemateib3600 5 років тому +15

    Companion Bible (E. W. Bullinger) is also an older study Bible worth mentioning.

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      I pull that bible off my shelf about once a year and try to give it a go.. but honestly I don't know which bible is harder to follow the notes in.. the Companion Bible.. Dakes.. or Thompsons....?

  • @DBrown-ig8em
    @DBrown-ig8em 5 років тому +11

    I really enjoyed this -- very informative. As are all of your videos I've seen so far. However, after hearing the discussion of the Catholic Bible I was surprised that neither of the excellent Lutheran Concordia study Bibles were mentioned. One uses the NIV, the other uses the ESV. They are the product of solid biblical scholarship.

    • @allansluis4268
      @allansluis4268 2 роки тому

      Just ordered the Lutheran ESV study Bible a few days ago and it should be here in about a week or less.

  • @LynnePedigoRidayReiter
    @LynnePedigoRidayReiter 5 років тому

    Thank you! Been wanting a fair and 'erudite' video on this topic for a long time. Plus you made us laugh! God bless you!

  • @dylan-ii5qp
    @dylan-ii5qp 5 років тому +1

    Matt, thank you for your service.Love the wealth of information.

  • @alexmeier7372
    @alexmeier7372 5 років тому +27

    I appreciate that you used the word deutorocanonical. I’m the only one I know outside of my seminary class that has used that word.
    I also see the books as apocryphal, but when explaining why the Catholics have “extra books” (or why we as evangelicals are missing books), it’s really useful to have words for both perspectives

    • @allansluis4268
      @allansluis4268 2 роки тому +1

      I like having the Septuagint which has the Apocrypha included along with my Catholic study and regular Bibles and from what I've researched, our Jewish friends opted to reject the Apocrpypha books since while they view them as being important historically, they don't view them as being inspired by God.

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому +1

      I try to avoid using words non scholars don't understand though.. I think the Bible needs to be taught at a level where simoketins lije me cab y=understand it.. I just started using the word "complicite".. the other day...

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      @@allansluis4268 yes I know what those 2 words refer to...

    • @DANtheMANofSIPA
      @DANtheMANofSIPA 2 роки тому +2

      @@jeffcarlson3269 Theres no reason Christians shouldn’t understand what Deuterocanonical means. Its not the same thing as the apocrypha so its just incorrect to say they are the same

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      @@DANtheMANofSIPA all I want to know is why when I typed in the word deuterocanonical...the internet transfers me to a Catholic site...?... Naturally a Catholic site is goung to be biased regarding the importance of the deuterocanonical books what wikipedia offers is this term refers to books belonging to the "second canon"... WHAT?.... there is only 1 canon... and that only includes books that were deemed to be placed in the Bible...and wikipedia goes on to state these books are the books considered by Protestants to be apocrypha... so Yes.. the deuterocanonical.. books does refer to the Apocrypha.. according to that,.. and from what I have read.. the apocryphal books were added to the original canon of scripture... and the only reason I can think of that "other books would be added to the original designated scripture.. would be for Catholics.. or any other religion to explain away some of the falsehoods they believe in... such as the existence of Purgatory.. infant Baptism.. Praying to Mary or Peter or any other Apostle..for instance.. 1 Tim 2:5.. specifically states "there is one mediator between God and Man.. the Lord Jesus"... why do Catholics confess their sins to a Priest... ?.. no where in scripture.. does it state we should call a Priest by the name, Father .. in fact in Matthew.. Jesus forbids this saying call No man Father but your Father in Heaven... and why are people praying to Mary or the Apostles?.. at the day of Pentecost.. in the beginning of Acts... Mary and the Apostles were praying the same as you or I... Mary needs a Savior just the same as you or I...Avts 8:37.. is removed from the Catholic bible... why?.. because it implies.. much water is needed for Baptism... I even have a Catholic commentary from 1952.. that states on page 861.. that Baptism by sprinkling is not taught anywhere in scripture,... but it has become accepted as a matter of convenience...Please do Not try to convince me that the Apocrypha.. is the same as Canonized scripture.. it makes for good reading.. but that is the limit of it;s value....

  • @adrianthomas1473
    @adrianthomas1473 4 роки тому +34

    I recommend the Orthodox Study Bible - from an Eastern Orthodox perspective.

    • @theturtwig50
      @theturtwig50 4 роки тому +3

      The joys of being in the Church. We got only really 3 different bibles to choose from.

    • @_____c___482
      @_____c___482 4 роки тому +5

      Yes! I own one and it is amazing!

    • @jeffreydotson1780
      @jeffreydotson1780 3 роки тому

      Recently picked up a NOAB, would very much recommend

  • @tellitstraight8031
    @tellitstraight8031 5 років тому +1

    You’re videos are fun to watch ! But you’re serious at the same time and I can tell you love history. You put in effort, I had to subscribe !

  • @ohhithere8055
    @ohhithere8055 3 роки тому

    Man you really just cleared that up for me!! I was starting to think that maybe I’ll read only my study Bible each day in replacement of studying the word on my own. The way you simplify things really puts it all into perspective and now I see there needs to be a balance of both. Thank you

  • @476429
    @476429 5 років тому +10

    If you want to be impartial, you should add a couple of comments. You said:
    ". . . . understand that you are holding a Bible that is entirely through the lens of Reformed thought, which could overwhelmingly be defined as Christian thought."
    And a Catholic would say:
    ". . . . understand that you are holding a Bible that is entirely through the lens of Catholic thought, which could overwhelmingly be defined as Christian thought."
    And an Orthodox would say:
    ". . . . understand that you are holding a Bible that is entirely through the lens of Orthodox thought, which could overwhelmingly be defined as Christian thought."
    And an Arminian would say:
    ". . . . understand that you are holding a Bible that is entirely through the lens of Arminian thought, which could overwhelmingly be defined as Christian thought."
    Even as a Protestant, I would say Orthodox and Catholics have the best claim to that statement.

    • @larrywarner1630
      @larrywarner1630 4 роки тому +1

      I do not understand why you as a Protestant would claim that Rome and Greece have the best claim. Rome is full of forgeries and idolatry and Greece is full of idolatry. The only thing I can think is you have fallen for the forgeries or you don't actually familiarize yourself with scripture.

  • @jamesellis1190
    @jamesellis1190 5 років тому +5

    Thanks for your awesome channel! I really love the "HarperCollins Study Bible", which is the NRSV (formal equivalence) translation. It is essentially a must at my Theological College. Have you come across it? If so, what are your thoughts?

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      thats what I have as well the Haroer Collins NRSV...

    • @marshamiddleton5910
      @marshamiddleton5910 2 роки тому

      Wesleyan Arminian here, and Harper Collins is one of my go-tos

  • @ivandinsmore6217
    @ivandinsmore6217 4 роки тому

    Another excellent video, Matt. I love your channel. Keep up the good work.

  • @thecrew777
    @thecrew777 4 роки тому +2

    Congratulations! You're the FIRST Bible Review Video I've watched that made me laugh almost all the way through! Great sense of humor, polished to make a point without upsetting anyone too much (think "milk toast"! hahahahahahha) and actually, a really good review of different TYPES of study Bibles! P.S. The Apocrypha only has notes to the Apocrypha. Something I noticed. And of course, what I called it just gave away that I'm not Catholic. However, it only has notes to the Apocrypha from the Apocrypha (in other words it's like a separate mini Bible in the middle that acts like it didn't know it was going to land in a Bible!) whether you're a Catholic or not! Really ENJOYED this review.

  • @TyrekeCorrea
    @TyrekeCorrea 5 років тому +2

    Your analysis of the NIV Study Bible is most helpful. Thank you.

  • @mpatberg7623
    @mpatberg7623 5 років тому +5

    Interesting. Do you memorize scripture? If so, which version?

  • @msft777jf
    @msft777jf 5 років тому

    Really a pleasant and informative video. Thank you brother

  • @Bombadil777
    @Bombadil777 4 роки тому

    Absolutely brilliant job! Bang on with your assessments . Subscribed

  • @trailrvs
    @trailrvs 5 років тому +3

    I love using Olive Tree app so I can have the notes from all of those study bibles accessible with every translation in a small space.

  • @PartTimeSarah2
    @PartTimeSarah2 5 років тому +7

    Ever since college my go to has been the New Oxford Annotated NRSV Bible. It’s academic and I love it

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      hmmm.. I bought one... it's ok... haven't had to use it much.. have pulled off shelf a couple of times to help with passages.. but the passages.. others skipped over that one did too.. so not much help to me...

  • @Jordan-1999
    @Jordan-1999 4 роки тому +4

    Does anyone have any thoughts on
    The Douay Rheims Clementina Vulgata?
    Appreciate it.

  • @pappafrita9269
    @pappafrita9269 4 роки тому

    Great video brother! Your presentation was entertaining and informative.

  • @skippy8696
    @skippy8696 5 років тому +71

    I really enjoy the ESV study bible, personal size edition that doesn't come with all the extensive theological articles (although the full size is still OK, depending on what you believe). It's a great tool for a new Christian to use.
    I've been saved for about 5 years now and when I first started reading the bible and studying it, I was taught that the KJV was the way to go, that all others were corrupted and that study bibles should be generally avoided. I held onto this belief for quite some time and I now believe that it was pretty damaging in the end. It definitely hindered my progress.
    If someone had handed me an ESV study bible or even a Macarthur study bible (which I also own in the ESV translation) when I first became a Christian I would have learned so much more, so much quicker. This is important for people who weren't raised in a Christian home or a Christian school and didn't pick up a bible until their adult years.
    You feel like you're constantly playing 'catch-up' with everyone else and that's where these bibles really help people out.

    • @HerLovesBooks
      @HerLovesBooks 5 років тому +21

      Great point. I grew up in church and still didn't read the Bible. I didn't understand it. Now I read with multiple translations for deeper understanding. I agree with you, new Christians struggle and almost any Bible is better than none.

    • @TERRORoftheLORD
      @TERRORoftheLORD 5 років тому +2

      The KJV reads at a 4th grade level. All other versions have in them somewhere, where they take glory from God.

    • @charliexoxox
      @charliexoxox 5 років тому +6

      TERRORoftheLORD you write at 3rd grade level aha. Not really sure what you’re saying here

    • @Kylemathews1
      @Kylemathews1 4 роки тому +3

      @@charliexoxox Some parts of KJV are easier than other but overall it's not the easiest to understand fully with all the old English. It's my main bible but I'm looking for an easier one to read alongside it.

    • @Maradudin
      @Maradudin 4 роки тому +1

      A good answer, Skippy! What do you find better: an ESV study bible or a Macarthur study bible? Have you ever learned an NKJV life application study bibles or any life application study bible at all?

  • @toddzaske
    @toddzaske 5 років тому +5

    Love the channel!!! Thanks for the level headed scholarly approach. As a Missouri Synod Lutheran I have to shout out to The Lutheran Study Bible by Concordia Publishing House. Yes it’s Lutheran, but it is orthodox.

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      I do Not have that one yet but I heard good things about it...

  • @TheBlindamerica
    @TheBlindamerica 2 роки тому +1

    Excellent review. We need to study for ourselves and it’s up to the readers and “maybe that’s the point.” Great job Matt!

  • @michaelfahrer9859
    @michaelfahrer9859 5 років тому +1

    Just found your channel and its very interesting and informative, really great.
    You've done a good job of explaining the basics of study Bible 's. So congrats. I own every one except two the Geneva and Reformers. My personal favorite is the Holman Christian Standard Life Application Bible. I have been to seminary and have a M Div and and a Mars degrees. I love the notes their are great for thinking and application. I used the NIV Study Bible to preach from when I was the pastor of four Baptist churches. The most important thing of all is not always the Translation or the kind of study Bible, but rather that a person Reads the Bible on a regular basis, hopefully daily.

  • @hollynonya6991
    @hollynonya6991 5 років тому +5

    I'm dying over your Bible collection!
    I have the new interpreters and Oxford study bibles, but I read my amplified Bible all the time

  • @jasonpratt5126
    @jasonpratt5126 6 років тому +29

    "Witheringly heavy back-breaking edition" -- lolol!

    • @MattWhitmanTMBH
      @MattWhitmanTMBH 6 років тому +4

      I was going someone would look carefully at the little type on the Bibles. Thank you Jason.

  • @DanAbsalonson
    @DanAbsalonson 5 років тому +1

    This was informative and cracked me up. Well done.

  • @Ripvanw1nkl3
    @Ripvanw1nkl3 5 років тому +2

    Your introductions always crack me up oh my goodness

  • @GP-dp4mr
    @GP-dp4mr 4 роки тому +8

    No Douay-Rheims or Knox bible?

  • @jamesmc04
    @jamesmc04 5 років тому +7

    The NASB is on balance my favourite translation - that, or the (much less conservative) New English Bible from 1970.
    The notes in the 1966 Jerusalem Bible and 1970 New American Bible are very full.
    The 1885 Revised Version has loads of references, which is very useful for study.

    • @prepperjonpnw6482
      @prepperjonpnw6482 2 роки тому +1

      Your comment is the first I’ve ever seen that mentions the 1966 Jerusalem Bible. I love the Bible and discovered that it is the Bible used in all English speaking countries for Catholics and Mass. I also like the Navarre Bible and RSV-CE from Ignatius press. Cheers

    • @jamesmc04
      @jamesmc04 2 роки тому

      @@prepperjonpnw6482 I have seen the Navarre Bible, or parts of it, but never a complete copy. I think that the Ignatius Press Bible is almost identical with the 1965(?) edition of the RSV that was approved for Catholics by the bishops of England and Wales. It is interesting that it has taken root in the United States.

  • @rembeadgc
    @rembeadgc 4 роки тому +1

    I had grown out of the "one version/translation/revision fits all" phase of study and into the fascinating world of every translation for every purpose and point of view! Seriously, it was eye opening and ultimately faith affirming. We never read the bible the same way as someone else. It's magnificent that scripture can be viewed and interpreted through so many minds and still retain power in its central, relevant theme and message.
    An interesting translation that I found very useful at a particular point in time is The Rotherham Emphasized Bible, which, because the grammatical element of "emphasis" is a part of the original languages, tells you which words or phrases were emphasized in a sentence. This opened up a door to interpretation of language use that I found very revealing and enriching. We don't realize how much of our current grammatical assumption is involved in our reading of scripture. It was fascinating.

  • @daisy23s
    @daisy23s 4 роки тому

    This video helped me so much. Thank you!

  • @Morna777
    @Morna777 5 років тому +4

    NIV is middle of the road because it was translated by scholars from many different traditions. That does help with the potential bias issue.

  • @pastorart1974
    @pastorart1974 5 років тому +6

    My favorite study Bible is the Thomson Chain. I own 2 of them. KJV & NIV. In college and Seminary I used the NASB.

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      @pastorart1974……if you are a pastor. Do you recommend reading from the NIV and NASB. Translations. ? Although I use the 2 for some cross referencing. I do not find them to be trustworthy. And many have been gender neutralized. Among their other issues. The reason I am asking is because I know pastors and teachers at judgement will be held accountable more so for any of their teachings. And though I know all bibles will lead one to God. My experience is versions like the NIV or NASB do not help one to grow in the Lord like the KJV does. Yet .. the NIV and NASB are better than No bible at all .. I guess

    • @pastorart1974
      @pastorart1974 2 роки тому

      @@jeffcarlson3269 Yes. NASB is still the most literal translation available today in English. NIV is the most readable. ESV is best combination of the two. Both are based on better manuscripts than the KJV translators had access to.
      At Illinois State University in the Spring of 1973 in one of my first official acts as a Church Elder, I suggested we fire King James and that was part of what led to over 12,000 hearing the Gospel and led to such a revival that six local churches from six different Denominations had to build new larger buildings.

  • @andrewpeters5165
    @andrewpeters5165 6 років тому +1

    Just curious, in your opinion would you consider the ESV the closest to the NIV, not spasificly in notes but as far as using the tools it offers such as maps and understanding concepts that may be hard to grasp with a quick read. In other words If I were to purchase an ESV I'm looking for somthing to help me mabe grasp concepts in deeper ways and in keeping with the example use the tools like maps for instance to help me gain a deeper understanding with out a specific theology influencing the writen word of God.

  • @getx1265
    @getx1265 4 роки тому

    Somehow just came upon this video and your channel tonight. Really loved your topic and style of presentation. Subbed and now looking forward to getting better acquainted with your work. Loved your comment about the Ryrie... I got mine back in 1981 and read it every day. Used to go to the same Dallas church as he, along with Dr Wolvoord himself whom I knew.

  • @gray_mara
    @gray_mara 5 років тому +62

    As a Catholic I really appreciated your non judgemental attitude. I sometimes feel like some Christians have a lot of hatred towards the Catholic faith that filters down to hatred for Catholics. These were really good reviews. I have several study Bibles and commentaries I use to compare when I'm doing my Bible study.

    • @gohantanaka
      @gohantanaka 5 років тому +10

      C M C Most of us don’t hate Catholics. It’s just that you guys have SO MUCH extra stuff on top of the Bible that you seem to take more seriously than the actual Word. Case in point; Protestants will quote scripture, Catholics quote the Catechisms.
      This is all anecdotal, mind you.
      Now, on the flip side, Catholics do seem to have a more intense focus on Education, something I think the other denominations could benefit from. Again; anecdotal observation.

    • @zachpw
      @zachpw 5 років тому +17

      Gohan Tanaka Same reason when most people talk about galaxies, they’ll reference physicists and books and encyclopedias etc. Most people aren’t a scholar or expert, so it may be more helpful to quote the people that have already dedicated their lives to understanding the scriptures.
      The Catechism isn’t just one guy’s opinions. It’s essentially a summary of 2000 years of thought and philosophy and tradition. And most passages have extensive footnotes of citations to both Scripture and secondary sources (such as Aquinas).

    • @bigmacsalad
      @bigmacsalad 5 років тому +6

      Why is the most powerful telescope in the Vatican (and I think the world still) named Lucifer...😯

    • @thecleaninglady8421
      @thecleaninglady8421 5 років тому +8

      @Joseph McCracken Methinks I smell a troll...

    • @thecleaninglady8421
      @thecleaninglady8421 5 років тому +9

      @Sith'ari Azithoth "There is only one mediator between God and man, the man Christ Jesus." 1st Timothy 1:25 :)

  • @nadiamalen
    @nadiamalen 5 років тому +13

    I feel like 13 minutes 43 seconds wasn't enough for this topic, haha. But thank you for condensing it down and letting me know a little more about a topic I actually didn't really know much about!

  • @CadillacBunner
    @CadillacBunner 3 роки тому

    This is a very compassionate and smart rundown. I really liked your comments on the NIV study bible. I had one once and I loved it (It fell apart and I never bought a new one)

  • @SanderGrolleman
    @SanderGrolleman 5 років тому +3

    Recently an elderly member of my congregation recommended the Dake study KJV. Does anyone have experience with that?

    • @believersblues
      @believersblues 5 років тому +1

      Dake was a Pentecostal Theologian, he was quite extensive in his studies. One may have trouble agreeing with some of his material, but overall, it is the best study Bible i have ever owned. Many have talked trash about it, probably those who haven't read it much. And yes, i am Pentecostal, raised in a different denomination, but shortly after i got saved, having studied the Bible more closely, i chose to align with Pentecostal Christians. I'm 62....

    • @HeKeepsMeSinging
      @HeKeepsMeSinging 4 роки тому

      I've had my Dake's since the 1976 and love, also use NKJV.

    • @HeKeepsMeSinging
      @HeKeepsMeSinging 4 роки тому

      @@believersblues . Hello, I was born in 1957, currently 62. Using my Dake's since 1976. Bless You!

  • @preston0808
    @preston0808 6 років тому +12

    I've recently gone to a system where I have a study bible at my desk, and a reader bible to carry around. I study/take notes from the study bible daily, and follow a specific reading plan. This forms my "foundation" of biblical knowledge.
    With my reader Bible (no notes), I read on the couch, take it in my car, etc. I read this one more instinctively. I'll pore through scripture, pray, read more, pray more, and ask the Holy Spirit for revelation.

  • @LawnD4rt
    @LawnD4rt 6 років тому +7

    Recently discovered the "Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible" NIV. It try's to give the reader a perspective of the people living during the respective times of the passages in the Bible. Also some, this is what the Hebrew meanings and the Greek meanings in context of history. Very interesting imho.

    • @NoBite2
      @NoBite2 6 років тому +1

      I've wondered about that one. I bet I'd like it as I enjoy when Matt gives us similar cultural background.

    • @LawnD4rt
      @LawnD4rt 6 років тому +4

      It even has ref to non-biblical text's to show relevant info.

    • @ebriggs3498
      @ebriggs3498 5 років тому +1

      Would recommend caution regarding studying the scripture through the view of culture. God's word is eternal, regardless of how the Hebrew people lived at that particular time. When we start taking Christian doctrine and breaking it down into culture, it becomes easy to throw out what we have decided we don't like or don't want to obey.

  • @DISCODAN1
    @DISCODAN1 4 роки тому

    Well done brother! Thanks for enlightening me as I am searching for answers transitioning from Catholicism to a more Protestant based faith ......? You are a natural and I am so glad that I found your channel!

  • @TasJess
    @TasJess 6 років тому

    Thankyou for the ideas for future bedtime reading to the kids. I'm sure they'll love it.

  • @RumorHazi
    @RumorHazi 5 років тому +26

    1560? Well, there is a good place to start. (Sigh) And we wonder why folks don't get a clear idea of the basis for modern Christianity that is Catholicism. Might want to check out the Revised Standard Version - Catholic Edition/The Ignatius Bible. And, for your entertainment, here are a few facts to ponder:
    The Catholic Church finally agreed on which writings should go into the Bible at the Council of Rome in 382 AD during the time of Pope Damasus.
    Damasus encouraged St. Jerome to translate the Scriptures into Latin since Latin was the common language of all educated people.
    Throughout the Middle Ages, portions of the Scriptures were translated into vernacular languages.
    In the mid-1400s, the Bible started to be translated into European languages more widely.
    In the 16th century, some Reformers published Bibles with bits missing, faulty translation work, and subversive notes.
    The authorities tried to regulate which Bibles were acceptable in order to control erroneous teaching.
    Throughout the years, the Catholic Church encouraged Bible reading, but kept control of the interpretation of the Bible as part of the Church’s inspired authority to teach the truth and preserve the unity of the Church.
    Pope Leo XIII published a letter in 1893 encouraging Bible study.
    Pius XII in 1943 also encouraged the faithful to study and love the Bible.
    The second Vatican Council in the 1960s encouraged all the clergy and people to study the Bible faithfully.

    • @tompalm64
      @tompalm64 5 років тому +4

      GSRider thank you for that little walk through history of the Bible! I hope he looks into it!

    • @RumorHazi
      @RumorHazi 4 роки тому +4

      Rafal Omnom Great response Rafal! Full of inaccuracies, bitterness, vitriol, and baseless lies. I especially liked the profanity! It gives the readers a real insight into your way of thinking. The saying goes that we lose the worst Catholics and we gain the best Protestants. We will keep praying that you start getting your information from a different source. As for your “cultural” Catholicism? Good luck explaining that.

    • @thefreshprince81
      @thefreshprince81 4 роки тому +4

      @Rafal Omnom I have no idea how people can follow the Catholic church if they have actually read the Bible? To me it fails in so many ways and ignores so many important things that the Bible teaches us. But im no theologian!

    • @kevinphillips150
      @kevinphillips150 4 роки тому +1

      @Rafal Omnom As you have stated, if one reads the Bible and takes their faith seriously, one cannot be a Roman Christian. I completely disagree with you. A reason I am a Roman Catholic is that I continue to read scripture over and over which persuades me to take my faith seriously. Considering Luke had his readers acknowledge that the mother of Jesus was to be honored by doing the will of God. Since Jesus gave His authority to someone to continue His ministry/work, it would seem reasonable that someone should do what Jesus had them do. As for Paul telling the Galatians to stay away from novelties and additions, remember when Paul said to Cephas (Peter) (2:11) that what Cephas had been doing was wrong living according to the Gentiles and not by the Jews (2:14-15). Being seduced by false teachers who had been Jews and were instructing all Christians, even those who had been Gentiles to observe Mosaical laws. As for Peter's faith, who had a greater faith other than Peter? Someone needed to continue to do the work Jesus was going. Who was going to do it? This was not the process of elimination. Jesus could have chosen anyone He wanted to but chose whom He decided to choose. Yes, Peter denied Jesus three times afterward. Jesus even said this would occur. As all Christians do, Christians at one time or another think like men and not as Jesus did. Besides, with the respect of the 5 wounds man produced on Jesus, Jesus was still able to survive such a treatment and still find Himself in heaven. No. Catholicism is not void but your perspective seems to be. Pax tecum!

    • @kevinphillips150
      @kevinphillips150 4 роки тому +1

      @@RumorHazi If someone leaves the Roman Catholic Church, were they a Roman Catholic, to begin with?

  • @kingneutron1
    @kingneutron1 5 років тому +4

    You brought out some versions I hadn't heard of; thanks. Started out with NIV Study, gravitated to NASB Study for a long time (helps if you're studying with Messianic Jews), and will be looking into the Reformed (Sproul) version. Stay away from "new living translation" - it's a paraphrase.

    • @CaffeinatedLifeMFF
      @CaffeinatedLifeMFF 4 роки тому +3

      That's not accurate. The Living Bible is a paraphrase. The New Living Translation is very much a translation, using dynamic equivalency to render a very readable and accurate translation of the original language texts.

  • @tanty2475
    @tanty2475 4 роки тому

    Thank you for a good run through of these scholastic works. It is not easy to shift through the theological leanings (or biased) behind these study bibles. I came across New English Translation that has tons of footnotes. What do you think?

  • @lordrichard8184
    @lordrichard8184 5 років тому

    Really great video and info!!

  • @celruwethin2712
    @celruwethin2712 5 років тому +3

    Praise the Lord for your channel. God bless uou

  • @davidwcooney
    @davidwcooney 5 років тому +5

    Actually, the Douay-Rheim’s was originally printed as a study bible with very extensive notes.

    • @jefftube58
      @jefftube58 5 років тому

      The Douay if I'm correct is a Catholic Bible. If true, I would not use it for serious study of the Scriptures.

    • @graybeard2113
      @graybeard2113 4 роки тому

      @@alhilford2345 forget the Latin and go back to the original Hebrew and Greek..

    • @CadillacBunner
      @CadillacBunner 3 роки тому

      @@jefftube58 The D-R is neither "Catholic" or "Protestant." It was translated from the first written copies of the christian scriptures and the Septuagint. It was the bible of the 4th century. No other bible exists from that time and Protestant/Catholic churches did not exist

    • @CadillacBunner
      @CadillacBunner 3 роки тому

      @@graybeard2113 Jerome used the Hebrew and Greek to produce the Latin.

    • @CadillacBunner
      @CadillacBunner 3 роки тому

      The Haydock version (the Leather hardbound) contained notes on the Challoner revision, the original D-R contained no notes. Remember, that is Richard Calloner's revision from 1789 that many people have. Great comment.

  • @sfspencer1
    @sfspencer1 5 років тому +2

    Matt, nice! Like where you're coming from. Very scholarly and knowledgable, yet still very pragmatic, down to earth, and very relatable. I was raised Catholic, but have never really attempted to immerse myself into the study of Christianity. Attending mass every Sunday always felt a little robotic and dare I say, unfulfilling. It took me 58 years to finally decide it's time to enlighten myself. I'd like to know a bit more about your background as you have obviously made studying the bible your life long passion, for which I admire you greatly. You seem like the kind of guy I'd love to sit down with and have a beer and talk a little philosophy or, by god, maybe even a little religion one day. I'll have to check out all of your videos. I'm going to have to describe you to my friends as "the everyday man's guide to the bible". Thanks for putting yourself out there for all of us and God bless you brother. Shawn Spencer

  • @swilderspin
    @swilderspin 4 роки тому

    Excellent explanations. Thank you. Great work!

  • @ericb8217
    @ericb8217 5 років тому +8

    Surprised you didn't include the MacArthur study Bible?

    • @andrewcosta2760
      @andrewcosta2760 5 років тому

      @Josh Did he say that? Provide a link if so. That would be pretty bad.

    • @nicolaslosito5735
      @nicolaslosito5735 5 років тому

      Josh proof please?

  • @TheTrollstigen
    @TheTrollstigen 5 років тому +4

    I'm getting the ESV cause it gives free chiropractic care. Makes me worry less about the thing being to heavy :-D

    • @sarahsunshine78
      @sarahsunshine78 3 роки тому

      I have it and used it exactly twice. It’s such a weighty tome that it’s just not practical for me to use regularly. I refuse to get rid of it because I may develop some guns some day and be able to utilize it efficiently, but for now, that beast of a Bible stays on my shelf looking pretty.

  • @robertzeurunkl8401
    @robertzeurunkl8401 5 років тому

    That was a really well done, and objective look at the different theological viewpoints, without endorsing or condemning any one in particular.

  • @Smurf431
    @Smurf431 4 роки тому +1

    I would LUV to hear your take on the NLT 2nd edition and the HCSB, both of which I use, and both I feel compliment each other

  • @alanshadastrokeanddiedinho2897
    @alanshadastrokeanddiedinho2897 5 років тому +3

    Dallas Theological Seminary is the ones who really helped out C. I. Scofield and his study bible.

  • @jasonpratt5126
    @jasonpratt5126 6 років тому +5

    So, some other (English) scholarly study Bibles (and their blatant biases where I'm sure I know what they are {wry g}). These things will be focused on language usage and/or historical context in various ways. Unless you want to look like the Rock, you should try to find these in electronic form. But then of course you might have a hard time finding and parsing the notes.
    THE NEW JERUSALEM BIBLE -- this is a mid-1980s English edition of a French Catholic Bible, slightly updated from the French original. For a non-Catholic like myself this is a genuine treasure: even though it has a Roman Catholic bias (duh), it provides a fascinating look into the technical rationales, and also just has a bunch of solid (for the 1980s) scholarly work. Would skew somewhat "liberal" by evangelical Protestant comparison.
    THE (BOLLINGER'S) COMPANION BIBLE -- this is an older work from back in the early modern period originally, and features a snapshot of how technically gritty conservative scholarship could get back in the late 1800s (originally published in 1922) -- almost a lost period of scholarship, today being slowly excavated. I'm not sure what flavor of Protestant it is, but it's a KJV (1611) translation which constantly swings for for the parking lot on its ludicrously beefy footnotes about various technical things. If I were a KJVonlyist, I might not use any other Bible.
    NIV ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDY BIBLE -- what it says on the tin. A 21st century production (2005), its main drawback is that this sort of thing tends to be a little outdated, relatively quickly, as archaeology (and related studies) progress -- and of course a lot of such studies are really more like theories than facts, sometimes hotly debated theories in the respective fields. There might be an update by now.
    NIV CASE FOR CHRIST STUDY BIBLE -- this also dates from 2005, and contains some of the same material as the NIVArch edition (naturally), but also a wider selection of technical apologetic topics, though simplified for easier digestion. Like the other NIV in this list, it tries to be broadly ecumenical, of use to anyone from any denomination or congregational group.
    Those feature both OT and NT. The next ones are NT only.
    MITCHELL'S NEW TESTAMENT -- this is an eclectic work by one guy, a trinitarian Christian universalist, but his unique approach minimizes his own biases. It serves as a one-stop grammatic-theory buffet, providing as many translation and interpretation options as possible for every clause in the NT, down to the phrase and individual terms sometimes (including variants from textual families when those are well-established and meaningful). I always like to promote his work, because I don't know of any other NT translation like it. Not for the easily distracted!
    CONCORDANT LITERAL VERSION -- originally also an eclectic work by one guy, Knoch, a late 19th/early 20th century dogmatic unitarian universalist (not a religious pluralist like the modern UUA group tends to be), but his highly disciplined methodology eliminates a lot of his biases. (I often use this in trinitarian apologetics, and I used it for several years before realizing he was a universalist, too! -- I was sure he held to some type of eternal conscious torment.) This is one of several translations into English more literal than the famous New American Standard (though I probably use that one the most). Naturally it's a bit clunky, but he's not so super-literal as to be mind-scramblingly unreadable in church (for example). His extensive English/Greek concordance in the back (giving even-more literal translations, and lists of where the terms can be found in the NT) has been superceded by online Bibles, but sometimes I like to just have a work in my hands to thumb around in.
    THE NESTLE-ALAND GREEK-ENGLISH NEW TESTAMENT -- this is an edition of the Revised Standard Version (one of the first widely published English attempts to update the King James / Authorized Version), married to the standard critical Greek text which stands behind most modern Bible translations. This is a pretty hardcore cross-reference and referential source: the compiled Greek text is sitting right over there on the other page, and not in an interlinear word-for-word fashion either! Plus it has many of the NestAl textual apparatus notes (about what Greek variants exist and where they're found). Again, a major online Bible resource is probably better at putting (some of) this information together nowadays; but if someone wanted a readable English Bible with the "textual criticism" information that Matt was talking about several episodes ago, this is a standard printed choice. (This and the CLV tend to be both fairly small, too, and won't strip the tendons from your arms. {g} )

  • @hcrawford115
    @hcrawford115 4 роки тому +2

    I've had a MacArthur study Bible for a few years and it has richly blessed my study of God's word. First ESV and now the NASB. Great resource from a teacher who has diligently preached the Word, verse-by-verse for over 50 years.

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      I recently picked up a copy of the MacArthur Preachers Bible.. this is a wide margin bible with like 48 gsm paper thickness.. this thing is Massive... No study notes.. only God;s word.. but this thing is massive.. it weighs about 8 lbs...

  • @johngeverett
    @johngeverett 5 років тому

    A very honest and useful presentation. I learned some things.

  • @cardsbykate
    @cardsbykate 4 роки тому +3

    What about the Spirit-filled Life Study Bible?

  • @GolerGulch
    @GolerGulch 5 років тому +5

    I like your take on the NASB. Yes the early 70's NASB was so literal that it has been called "wooden" (i've heard 3 Pastors say that). Did you know that the Lockman Foundation responded to that by coming out with the 1995 edition (so far the latest). Then Zondervan picked it up in 1999 and added their notes taken from the NIV Study Bible and viola', you have an incredibly accurate Study Bible with great notes! I like this because to be honest it tracks perfectly with the Geneva and King James Bibles (I much prefer the Geneva as it is more direct in the O.T. than the KJV). That being said I'm back with a NKJV Study Bible-oh so many choices!!

    • @jeffcarlson3269
      @jeffcarlson3269 2 роки тому

      @Randy... yes... Lockman Had to come out with an updated version...since their first translation of the NASB was not only wooden, but it had left out certain portions of scripture.. necessary for the Bible to truly be able to be truthful..... One case in point...... read the newer NASB of Luke 24:51..... where it reads at the end of the verse.. :"and He was taken up".. now read the same verse in the original NASB.... that part is Not there..... but the event DID happen did it Not... ?.. How can Luke be telling Theophilis in Acts chapter 1 that he (Luke).. had told Theophilis..."all".. if he had seemingly according to the older version of NASB.. had NOT.. mentioned anything about Jesus' ascension?....

  • @ryanbuikema3102
    @ryanbuikema3102 5 років тому

    Very good video!
    I have a esv MacArthur study Bible and it's been a massive help!
    My question is how often should we read other translations to help us get a better handle on a particular passage? I ask because I have heard preachers say to use more than one translation.
    I use the ESV 98% of the time and the Holman Christian Standard Bible the other 2%

  • @ZachDames
    @ZachDames 4 роки тому +2

    You mention theological persuasion in the Scofield Bible, I’ve never heard this term however I am very familiar with the Scofield KJV Bible and in fact used to own one.
    As for as theological persuasion, pros and cons? As I am uneducated on this subject, I would naturally assume that this could cause the same problems as believers in the very early days of the Catholic Church where they were taught from non English translations by the priests and basically had to believe the priests theological understanding. Could it be said that this is the same as theological persuasion?

    • @jwhippet8313
      @jwhippet8313 4 роки тому

      He was using persuasion in the sense of variety not in the sense of coercion. Like calling heterosexuality a 'sexual persuasion.'

  • @sullym1867
    @sullym1867 4 роки тому +9

    I’m glad you were honest about the NLT. It is wildly helpful for Christians that do not know the Bible. It’s a really good sign that people outgrow it quickly. It means they actually learn with it.

  • @ronmccombs9133
    @ronmccombs9133 4 роки тому +3

    How about a study on Westcott-Hort?

  • @MrBrucetho
    @MrBrucetho 4 роки тому

    Thank you for an interesting review of study bibles. I would like to hear your views on concordances. I have never used a study bible. I like Barklay's DSB series. I also use the New Jerome Biblical Commentary and the Nave's Topical Compact Bible. Thanks

  • @CindlesExplorer2023
    @CindlesExplorer2023 4 роки тому +1

    Hey thanks for the link of the catholic study bible 😊. Luv your channel from NZ.... I’m slow to finding great channels 😂😂😂 see this was posted a while ago