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Tremper Longman, III

Autor de An Introduction to the Old Testament

113+ Obras 10,780 Miembros 65 Reseñas 6 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Tremper Longman III (PhD, Yale University) is Distinguished Scholar of Biblical Studies at Westmont College in Santa Barbara, California. He is the author or coauthor of over twenty books, including How to Read Genesis, How to Read the Psalms, How to Read Proverbs, Literary Approaches to Biblical mostrar más Interpretation, and Old Testament Essentials, and is coeditor of A Complete Literary Guide to the Bible. mostrar menos
Créditos de la imagen: Used by permission of Baker Publishing Group, copyright © 2008. All rights to this material are reserved. Materials are not to be distributed to other web locations for retrieval, published(see © info.)

Series

Obras de Tremper Longman, III

How to Read the Psalms (1988) 860 copias
How to Read Proverbs (2002) 395 copias
How to Read Genesis (2005) 326 copias
God Is a Warrior (1995) 200 copias
A Complete Literary Guide to the Bible (1993) — Editor — 170 copias
Luke--Acts (2007) 169 copias
How to Read Exodus (2009) 132 copias
The Baker Illustrated Bible Dictionary (2013) — General Editor — 105 copias
How to Read Daniel (2020) 34 copias
The Almighty Bible Exodus (2010) 10 copias
Bold Love 2 copias
Micah 1 copia
Emanuel em nosso lugar (1905) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

A Biblical History of Israel (2003) 559 copias
Dictionary for Theological Interpretation of the Bible (2005) — Contribuidor, algunas ediciones529 copias
Canon and Biblical Interpretation (2006) — Contribuidor — 124 copias
Hearing the Old Testament: Listening for God's Address (2012) — Contribuidor — 90 copias
Reclaiming the Old Testament for Christian Preaching (2010) — Contribuidor — 82 copias
Reading Genesis 1–2: An Evangelical Conversation (2013) — Contribuidor — 75 copias

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Eloquently written, thoughtful and objective, this is an explanative account of the book of Genesis. The author uses a multi-angled approach that involves a variety of fields of study including mythology, metaphysics, empiricism, theology, history - all to great effect. I especially like his introductory explanation of what “High context communication” is and why is matters so much when applied to the Bible and events described therein.
Pristine and informative, this deserves notice.
 
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nitrolpost | 2 reseñas más. | Mar 19, 2024 |
Summary: A running commentary of the book of Revelation that focuses on the Old Testament background running through the book, along with material that goes deeper on the Old Testament material relating to different themes and the structure of the book as well as its contemporary application.

There is a school of thought that tries to read the book of Revelation and relate it to the events of the present day, a trend I’ve observed for fifty years, requiring many revisions in interpretation. This commentary, part of the “Through Old Testament Eyes” series, looks back, providing a running commentary of the Old Testament texts to which many of images and metaphors allude or draw upon. There is probably no New Testament book where this kind of commentary is more necessary, and Tremper Longman III admirably fills this need.

First of all, Longman offers a running, verse-by-verse commentary, offering Old Testament background on references in the text. The commentary is scholarly but not technical, accessible for a lay reader. Just one example, from “Look, he is coming with the clouds” (Revelation 1:7). Longman recalls the ancient Near East background of cloud riding deities, particularly storm clouds, which he believes in view here (cf. Psalm 18:9; 104:3). He cites the prophesy of Isaiah against Egypt in Isaiah 19:1-2 of God coming against them on a swift cloud, and similarly toward Nineveh in Nahum 1:3. He then focuses attention on the vision recorded in Daniel 7:13, where we have God both as Ancient of Days and coming “like a son of man” on the clouds.

These commentaries also incorporate sections called “Through Old Testament Eyes,” stepping back from the text. Following the above commentary, Longman offers an extended discussion of Daniel, as the other instance of extended apocalyptic writing in scripture. He observes that parallels in both where present evil will be overcome with God’s final victory. Where Revelation differs is that it reflects the already and not yet experience of the church having witnessed the resurrection of the son of God yet awaiting his final victory.

There are a number of “What the Structure Means” articles throughout the text as well. One of the most helpful was his discussion on the Seals, Trumpets, and Bowls, noting Bauckham’s observation that “the seventh-seal opening includes the seven trumpets and the seventh trumpet includes the seven bowls.” He argues that they are not sequential, but spiraling cycles moving toward the end. He notes the interludes and the significance of the seventh in each series–silence followed by earthquakes and lightning after the seventh seal, a vision of the heavenly temple and the ark along with more lightning, thunder, and earthquakes, and after the seventh bowl all of these with a severe earthquake.

Finally the commentary offers “Going Deeper” sections connection the commentary to application. For example, on “Perseverance of the Church: Revelation 11” focuses on the faithful testimony of the two witnesses who represent the church. They are killed by the beast from the Abyss but raised by God to heaven. Later, the pregnant woman, also representing the church is pursued by Satan but twice escapes harm. Finally, in Revelation 19, we have the vision of the wedding supper of the Lamb after the fall of Babylon (Rome). Longman notes how the churches to which John wrote faced persecution, and these words have encouraged the church whenever she has faced oppression, marginalization, and adversity.

One comes away from studying this commentary aware afresh of the seamless garment that is scripture. The Old Testament illumines so much of Revelation, furnishing the stock of metaphors John draws upon in relating his visions, while uniquely expanding upon them. Rather than getting caught up in prophecy chart, Longman invites us to get caught up in the Lamb who was worthy, the victory of God, the defeat of evil, and the enduring hope this offers the people of God of John’s day and throughout the ages down to our own.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary review copy of this book from the publisher.
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Denunciada
BobonBooks | Nov 27, 2022 |
Insightful book on the deluge in Genesis from OT Scholar John Walton. Fairly easy read considering the book's nature.
 
Denunciada
JourneyPC | 2 reseñas más. | Sep 26, 2022 |

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Obras
113
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Miembros
10,780
Popularidad
#2,202
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
65
ISBNs
170
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