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D**H
A Detailed Comparison with the NIV Zondervan Study Bible - Both Superb!
The ESV Study Bible (ESVSB) now has a sturdy new "competitor" in the NIV Zondervan Study Bible (NIVZSB). How do they stack up against each other?In this review I will note similarities between the two, describe some differences, and survey their approach to 10 controversial topics/texts. (For a much fuller version of this review, covering more topics/texts, visit my website by searching for "Dwight Gingrich" and "NIV Zondervan Study Bible.")SIMILARITIES:Both are massive works, first (NIVZSB) and second (ESVSB) in length among major evangelical study Bibles.Both stand firmly within the conservative evangelical tradition. Both are scholarly works with general editors bearing PhDs from the University of CambridgeâWayne Grudem for the ESVSB and D. A. Carson for the NIVZSB. My incomplete manual comparison of the contributors to the two study Bibles revealed at least 9 people who contributed to both.Both affirm traditional authorship for contested books such as the Pentateuch (Moses with minor editorial shaping), Isaiah (Isaiah), Matthew (the apostle Matthew), the Pastoral Epistles (Paul), and 2 Peter (the apostle Peter).There are even typographical similarities: both volumes print the sacred text in a single column on each page, with cross references along the outside margins, and with commentary in double columns beneath.Indeed, these two study Bibles are similar enough that the main factor that should influence your choice between the two is your preference in translations.DIFFERENCES:It appears to me that the ESVSB is somewhat stronger than the NIVZSB in these areas: Charts, maps, illustrations, historical information, and general apologetic or bibliological articles. The ESVSB, for example, has separate articles devoted to archeological topics, biblical languages, biblical doctrine, biblical ethics, and the perspectives that various denominations, religions, and cults bring to Scripture.A comparison of the introductions to Exodus shows that the one in the ESVSB is slightly longer (six pages to the NIVZSBâs five), with more attention given to the historical reliability of the book and to its literary features. Similarly, the NIVZSB introduction for Galatians is three pages long, while the ESVSBâs covers four pages, providing a little more historical data, a superior map, and more space devoted to charts rather than photographs.The differences, I stress, are differences of degree. The similarities here outweigh the differences, but I give the ESVSB the blue ribbon for visual helps and breadth of topics addressed in articles.The NIVZSB is stronger in at least one way: its emphasis on biblical theology. This makes sense, given the editors of the two volumes: Wayne Grudemâs most significant authorial effort is his massive and massively popular Systematic Theology, while D. A. Carson is better known for both his commentaries and his editorial work in books such as the Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament and the series New Studies in Biblical Theology.The NIVZSBâs focus on biblical theology is most evident in the twenty-eight articles found before the concordance. Most articles are two or three pages long; together they cover sixty-six pages. Since these articles are the most unique part of this new study Bible, I will list them here, with their authors:The Story of the Bible: How the Good News About Jesus Is Central â Timothy KellerThe Bible and Theology â D. A. CarsonA Biblical-Theological Overview of the Bible â D. A. CarsonThe Glory of God â James M. Hamilton Jr.Creation â Henri A. G. BlocherSin â Kevin DeYoungCovenant â Paul R. WilliamsonLaw â T. D. AlexanderTemple â T. D. AlexanderPriest â Dana M. HarrisSacrifice â Jay A. SklarExile and Exodus â Thomas Richard WoodThe Kingdom of God â T. D. AlexanderSonship â D. A. CarsonThe City of God â T. D. AlexanderProphets and Prophecy â Sam StormsDeath and Resurrection â Philip S. JohnstonPeople of God â MoisĂ©s SilvaWisdom â Daniel J. EstesHoliness â Andrew David NaselliJustice â Brian S. RosnerWrath â Christopher W. MorganLove and Grace â Graham A. ColeThe Gospel â Greg D. GilbertWorship â David G. PetersonMission â Andreas J. KöstenbergerShalom â Timothy KellerThe Consummation â Douglas J. MooWhile I disagree with minor points in some of these articles, I find myself agreeing with a much higher percentage of what is said here than with what is said in most systematic theologies. That is the benefit of staying closer to the language of Scripture itself. Most of these articles are very useful and some (such as Kellerâs opening one) are even moving. I have a niggling question about the place of such essays in a study Bible (how many readers will really find and benefit from this content in their specific moments of exegetical need?), but reading them can certainly make one a better reader of Scripture.CONTROVERSIAL TOPICS/TEXTS:On the central matters of the gospel, both study Bibles are solid. They promote the core gospel message well, along with the necessary human response to Godâs grace. And, though both are generally Calvinistic throughout, they do not emphasize this interpretive lens in a way that overshadows the biblical message itself. Well done.But how does they handle more controversial passagesâtexts which theologically conservative Christians sometimes disagree about? And how does the NIVZSB compare to the ESVSB in its handling of these texts?Creation: These study Bibles hold similar positions here: (1) On "days": The ESVSB presents five readings that âfaithful interpretersâ offer regarding the days of creation but refrains from assessing them. The NIVZSB says the mention of âdaysâ âemphasizes the logical development of Godâs creation more than it pinpoints the chronological developmentâ (p. 20). (2) On "kinds": Both suggest this is a general term that (so they imply) leaves the door open for theistic evolution. (3) Both affirm that Adam and Eve were historical persons.Divorce and Remarriage: Both study Bibles underscore at Matthew 5:31-32 and Matthew 19:1-12 that âJesus is reaffirming Godâs original intention that marriage be permanent and lifelongâ (NIVZSB, p. 1970). They teach that both divorce and remarriage are âpossible but never idealâ (NIVZSB, p. 1969) in cases where one marriage partner engages in âsexual immoralityâ (Matt. 5:32; 19:9). It seems that the NIVZSB may interpret âsexual immoralityâ slightly more broadly, saying that the Greek term âporneia [is] the broadest term for sexual sin. It refers to sexual relations with any other person besides oneâs monogamous heterosexual spouseâ (p. 1939). The ESVSB, rather than speaking of âsexual relations,â specifies âsexual intercourse,â possibly a narrower term. On the other hand, the NIVZSB takes a more rigid stance than the ESVSB on 1 Corinthians 7:10-16: âThere are only two options for a divorced woman: (1) remain unmarried or (2) reconcile with her husband.â It acknowledges regarding verse 15 ("the brother or sister is not bound in such circumstancesâ) that âit is often suggested that this allows a deserted Christian spouse to remarryâ but states that âthis interpretation is not plausible.âHomosexuality: Both study Bibles state clearly that homosexual relations are sinful. An NIVZSB comment on Romans 1:26-27 succinctly states that âin making humans [sic!] beings male and femaleâŠ, God manifests his intention for human sexual relationsâ (p. 2293).Gender Roles: It will surprise some readers to learn that the NIVZSB takes nearly the same stance on gender roles as the ESVSB does. In all the gender texts I survey, the NIVZSB and ESVSB adopt nearly the same positionâgender role difference in marriage and church are timeless principles, men are called to authoritative and loving leadership in home and church while women are called to submit, and women may not be overseers but may perhaps be (non-teaching) deacons. The NIVZSB does apparently leave the door open for women to teach men in non-authoritative positions in the church, but otherwise the differences between the study Bibles are differences of tone more than position, with the ESVSB giving a more rigorous defense of the position shared by both.Nonresistance and Relationship to Government: On Matthew 5:38-48 the NIVZSB says that âJesus is prohibiting retaliation for wrongs experienced.â It explains that a slap on the cheek is âa common Jewish insult by a superior to a subordinate, not an aggressorâs blow.â (p. 1939). This brief interpretation leaves the door open for Christians to use deadly force in other circumstances, though the NIVZSB does not explicitly state this. The ESVSB presents this position much more clearly: âJesus is not prohibiting the use of force by governments, police, or soldiers when combating evil⊠One should not return an insulting slap, which would lead to escalating violence. In the case of a more serious assault, Jesusâ words should not be taken to prohibit self-defenseâŠ, for often a failure to resist a violent attack leads to even more serious abuse.â This difference is also evident in places like Romans 12-13, where the NIVZSB gently questions whether governments have the right to administer capital punishment, while the ESVSB suggests one way believers can "overcome evil with good" is through military or police force.Spiritual Gifts: I havenât found any clear statement where the NIVZSB strongly affirms whether or not the âmiraculousâ spiritual gifts continue to this day. This is remarkable, given that Sam Storms, a strong continuationist, was chosen to author an essay on âProphets and Prophecy.â In this article he only vaguely hints at his own position by some present-tense references to prophecy. The ESVSB adopts a similar stance: âBible-believing Christians disagree as to whether the gift of tongues ceased after the apostolic age of the early church, or whether tongues is a spiritual gift that should continue to be practiced today.â Clearly, both Bibles are aiming to avoid a fight over this volatile topic.Foreknowledge, Predestination, Election: At Romans 8:29-30 the NIVZSB gives two possible explanations for Godâs foreknowledge: âPerhaps âknew ahead of timeââŠ: God âforeknewâ who would believe in him and so predestined them. But âknowâ probably has the biblical sense of âenter into relationship withââŠ: God chose to initiate a relationship with people âbefore the creation of the worldâ⊠and on that basis âpredestinedâ themâ (p. 2307). The ESVSB only presents the second option, and emphasizes that âpredestinedâ means âpredeterminedâ and that Godâs calling is âeffective,â not merely an invitation. At Romans 9 comments are similar. At Ephesians 1 both are strongly Calvinistic. At 1 Timothy 2:4, the ESVSB has a lengthy note that describes both Arminian and Calvinist interpretations without taking sides (surprise!), ending thus: âHowever one understands the extent of the atonement, this passage clearly teaches the free and universal offer of salvation to every single human being; âdesiresâ shows that this offer is a bona fide expression of Godâs good will.â On this Timothy verse the NIVZSB suggests that âwhat God âwantsâ may be hindered by lack of human faith.â This last statement opens the door to non-Calvinistic interpretations (but does not demand them). The NIVZSB and the ESVSB are both similarly Calvinistic regarding Godâs choice and offer of salvation, but with occasional surprising flexibility.Eternal Security: At Hebrews 6:4-6 the NIVZSB notes the âgreat difficulties for interpretation,â describes several common interpretations, and finally concludes that âthose who do not hold on to faith in Christ show that their experience was superficial rather than genuineâ (p. 2503). The ESVSB directs us to a note at Hebrews 3:14, which says âScripture is clear⊠that true believers cannot lose their salvation.â At Hebrews 7:25 the NIVZSB argues that the fact that Jesus âalways lives to intercede forâ believers âprecludes their turning backâ (p. 2507). But such statements are relatively rare in the NIVZSB. At 1 John 2:19 the NIVZSB makes no clear theological deductions, while the ESVSB states that âthis implies that those who are truly saved will never abandon Christ.â The ESVSB makes similar statements at John 6:40, John 10:28, 2 Peter 1:10, and Jude 1:2âall places where the NIVZSB makes no clear assertions about whether believers can ever lose their salvation.Sabbath and Lordâs Day: These study Bibles take a similar stance on this topic. At Exodus 20:8-11 the ESVSB makes no Christian application, while the NIVZSB mentions that the Sabbath âanticipates the experience of rest through faith in Christâ (p. 155). At Colossians 2:16-17 the ESVSB says âit is debated whether the Sabbaths in question included the regular seventh-day rest of the fourth commandment, or were only the special Sabbaths of the Jewish festal calendar.â At Galatians 4:10 the ESVSB notes that some âbelieve that the weekly Sabbath command is not temporary but goes back to Godâs pattern in creation.â The NIVZSB whispers (with dramatically different tone than Paul!) that âtreating certain times as more sacred than others⊠is not an essential feature of Christian faithâ (p. 2390). Thus, unlike the ESVSB, the NIVZSB apparently never suggests the Sabbath command may still apply. However, it seems a little more open to seeing Sunday worship as being normative (see description of the practice of the early church at 1 Cor. 16:2 and Rev. 1:10).Israel and the Church: Both are inconsistent on this topic. The NIVZSB's âExile and Exodusâ article presents one perspective strongly: âAs the only perfectly obedient Israelite...âa faithful remnant of oneâJesus (not the unbelieving nation) is the sole heir of all of the covenantal promises made to Abraham, Israel, and David... Life everlasting, a land flowing with milk and honey, a posterity as numerous as the stars, a perpetual reign over all creation, and uninhibited access to the Fatherâs presence all belong exclusively to himâ (p. 2661). Both agree that at 1 Peter 1:1 Peter âimplicitly claims that the church of Jesus Christ is the new Israel, made up of both Jewish and Gentile believers in Christâ (NIVZSB, p. 2539; ESVSB says "explicitly"). However, both Bibles (perhaps especially the ESVSB) also suggest multiple times that seeing a future role for an ethnic Israel is a legitimate interpretative approach.CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS:My general sense is that the NIVZSB is slightly more careful than the ESVSB to avoid offending its readersâor, to state things more positively, that it is aiming to please a slightly larger readership.On the one hand it is equally careful to adhere to the basic evangelical commitments (things such as traditional authorship and the historical reliability of Scripture), while also feeling equally free to adopt recent approaches to synthesizing the Bible and science (no firm stance on the days of Genesis or the question of evolution).On the other hand, it seems slower to affirm some of the more fundamentalist ideas of evangelicalism (things such as capital punishment or a special plan for the future of ethnic Israel), it feels slightly more cautious as it affirms some points of evangelical doctrinal dispute (inability of true believers to fall from the faith, distinct gender roles in the church), and it is sometimes slower to pick sides at all regarding what the text means for today (the Christian and the military).But such differences are comparatively minor when set within the widely diverse translations and study Bibles currently on the market. Both the NIVZSB and the ESVSB are solidly conservative evangelical and among the very best in their class. I am very happy to recommend both for your judicious use.-----------The ESVSB is still about as good as a study Bible gets. I give both 4-1/2 out of 5 stars.
R**T
You will love your ESV Study Bible
I still remember getting my first study Bible. It was many years ago, probably in the late 80's, that my parents gave me the gift of a brand new NIV Study Bible. I used that Bible daily for many years though it was eventually replaced by a New Geneva Study Bible in the NKJV translation and after that by a Reformation Study Bible in the ESV. Today, if you drop by my home in the early morning, you are likely to see me reading from the Literary Study Bible, also in the ESV. On the bookcase in my office I have a copy of the Archaeological Study Bible (NIV), the MacArthur Study Bible (NASB) and The Apologetics Study Bible (HCSB). A visit to a local Christian bookstore will turn up many more and a search of publishers' "Coming Soon" lists will show more still. Truly there is no lack of study Bibles available to us. And into this crowded field steps a newcomer, the ESV Study Bible.Though I typically will not review a book until I have read every word, I have had to make an obvious exception for this title. Reading every word of the 20,000 study notes and the more than 50 articles would be a time-consuming task. This Bible's 2,752 pages boast almost 2 million words. This makes it around 700 pages longer than most of the other study Bibles available today. However, I have had access to the complete text for several weeks now and have taken many opportunities to read through parts of the Bible.The ESV team has done an excellent job of generating excitement for the ESV Study Bible and particularly so among the type of person who tends to read my book reviews. So in this review I will try to cut through the hype and, to the best of my ability, judge this new Bible on its own merits. After all, at $35 or $40 for the hardcover edition (and upwards of $200 for the premium calfskin edition) this Bible is not an insignificant investment.How to Use a Study BibleThere are some Christians who feel that study Bibles are not ultimately helpful to Christians. After all, we have been given the Holy Spirit who promises to us that He will help us to know and to apply the Scriptures. While I understand these concerns, I feel that study Bibles can be immensely helpful and especially so to those who do not have extensive reference libraries or extensive theological training. However, these Bibles must be used properly. The biblical text must book-end any study of Scripture. The Introduction to the ESV Study Bible says it well. "The best way to use a study Bible, therefore, is always to begin and end with the words of the Bible. We should always begin by reading the Bible's actual words, seeking with our hearts and our minds to understand these words and apply them to our lives. Then, after starting with the words of the Bible itself, we can turn to the study notes and many other study Bible resources for information about the background to the text, for the meaning of puzzling words or phrases, and for connections to other parts of the Bible. Finally, we should return again to the Bible itself, reading it with a new and deeper understanding, asking God to speak through his Word to the situation of our life and to draw us near to himself." We will proceed through this review with the understanding that the notes and maps and articles and cross-references within any study Bible, helpful though they may be, are only supplementary to the words of God.ESVIt goes without saying that the heart of the ESV Study Bible is the English Standard Version. This is considered by many biblical scholars to be a superior translation of the Bible and it is fast becoming the de facto translation amongst conservative and Reformed Christians. For the purposes of this review I will not defend or criticize the ESV as a translation. However, it bears mention that, while I am not as dogmatic as some when it comes to Bible translations, I do feel that the ESV is the best translation available today. As I understand the issues, it represents the best combination of readability and faithful translation. It is a joy to read and I find it as simple as any translation to memorize. While there are several other excellent English translations available, the ESV is top of the class.Look & FeelThe ESV Study Bible has launched with eight editions: Hardcover, TruTone Nat Brown, TruTone Classic Black, Black Bonded Leather, Burgundy Bonded Leather, Black Genuine Leather, Burgundy Genuine Leather and Premium Calfskin Leather.In any edition the ESV Study Bible looks great. It is contemporary in its coloring (white is dominant with orange accents in the hardcover) and in the traiangle which shows up throughout (on the cover, to mark headings, and even as a bullet for lists of information). The rectangle has no deeper significance than a simple design element. In an interesting but effective design decision, the TruTone editions have this triangle stitched to the cover. The leather editions have "ESV" in large gold letters on the spine with "Study Bible," "English Standard Version" and "Crossway" in smaller gold type. The TruTone has the same text but with the "ESV" embossed. The hardcover features black and orange backgrounds on the spine with the text printed over top. The standard ESV guarantee applies to these Bibles, meaning that a customer who discovers manufacturing defects during normal use can return the Bible to have it replaced with one of equal or greater value.The Bible is made to be durable. It is smyth sewn which is the binding process considered by many to be the best and longest-lasting method. It allows the Bible to lie flat even on page one and on page 2,752 (at least in the TruTone). It is printed on "high-opacity, high-quality French Bible paper" and in a single-column format with the cross-references in the inside margin. The paper is thin and light but still sturdy. My two year-old put the Bible to the test when she inadvertently stepped on it while it was lying open. The page wrinkled under her heel but did not tear. I also learned from her that chewing gum can be removed from the cover of the TruTone while permanent marker cannot. The fonts are very dark and easy to read with a heavy black serif font for the biblical text and a thin black sans-serif for the notes and cross-references. The page headings are in a bold gray with page numbers in a thin gray. Chapter numbers are a large gray serif font while headings are italicized black sans-serif. The pages display a fair bit of bleed-through where, when you look at a page, you can see the ink showing through from the previous page or two. Most of us are accustomed to this bleed-through in our Bibles. Where it is a bit more apparent and distracting is where it shows through on the maps and illustrations.One feature that has received much attention in the ESV Study Bible is its use of color. Most study Bibles offer maps and illustrations only in grayscale. The ESV Study Bible, though, offers full-color illustrations and maps. This is quite a nice feature. The splashes of color throughout, including colored highlighting and shading, are unexpected to my eye but very effective. Though the standard glossy maps in the back of the Bible are superior in quality to the ones scattered throughout, even the smaller maps are nicely done and provide important geographical context without having to slip to the Bible's final pages. The illustrations, commissioned specifically for this project, are very well done and nicely supplement the notes.ESV Study Bible OnlineThe ESV Study Bible is one of only a couple of study Bibles to offer an extensive online component to accompany the Bible. Included with each Bible is a registration code that will allow the customer to access the ESV Online Study Bible. There they will find the complete text of the Bible along with all of the study notes, articles, maps, and all the other features of the Bible. Unique online features include the ability to create and save personalized online notes; to search and follow interactive links between notes, maps, articles, charts, timelines, illustrations, and cross-references; and to listen to audio recordings of the ESV. It adds interactive features that are only possible in a computer-based environment. While the online component is a useful addition to the Bible (and a free one!), at this time it seems under-developed and I suspect many readers will find that they do not refer to it very often.FormatEach book of the Bible begins with an extensive introduction. This may include sections dealing with Time, Date and Title; Author; Theme; Key Themes; Purpose, Occasion and Background; Literary Features; Outline; and so on. Particularly important is the History of Salvation Summary which sets each of the books within the context of the wider body of Scripture and hence within the history of salvation. Introductions may also include timelines, maps, and notes on literary features specific to that book. In every case, the reader will receive a thorough explanation as to the book's authorship, purpose and context in God's plan of salvation.The text notes vary in density but typically comprise about half of each page in the New Testament and perhaps a third in the Old Testament. They focus primarily on explanation and rarely on application. In one handy feature, highlighted notes correspond to primary points in the outline while highlighted verses and headings within the notes correspond to secondary points in the outline.ScholarshipThe ESV Study Bible has been produced by as good a group of scholars as any study Bible. The General Editor is Wayne Grudem, the Theological Editor is J.I. Packer, the Old Testament Editor is C. John Collins and the New Testament Editor is Thomas Schreiner. The study note contributors represent a broad cross-section of reputable Evangelical scholars. The articles included within the Bible have been contributed by some well-known pastors and scholars, including John Piper, David Powlison, Darrell Bock, Leland Ryken, R. Kent Hughes, Daniel Wallace, and many more.Controversial TheologyOne concern people are likely to have when considering a new study Bible concerns the theological perspective offered in the notes. Does this particular study Bible take a Reformed or Arminian position on salvation? A complementarian or egalitarian perspective on gender roles? An amillennial or premillennial position on the end times? I looked through many of the notes seeking what this Bible says on some of the more common controversies: end times, spiritual gifts and soteriology. I found this an interesting comparison with the Reformation Study Bible. It seems to me that the Reformation Study Bible came from a much more narrowly-defined theological position; it was Reformed, it was cessationist, it was amillennial. The ESV Study Bible, on the other hand, offers a wider or less-defined perspective. Where the doctrine is clear and undisputed among Evangelicals, so too are the notes. But where doctrines are controversial and within the area of Christian freedom or disputable matters, the notes tend not to take a firm position, even when the author or editor is firmly in one camp or the other. Whether this is positive or negative may well depend on the individual reader.To satisfy my curiosity, I opened my NIV Study Bible, Reformation Study Bible, MacArthur Study Bible and ESV Study Bible and compared their notes on several areas of controversial theology--end times, predestination and spiritual gifts. None of these Bibles offered notes that were unbiblical so I was left looking for the differences in perspective. In general I found that the MacArthur Study Bible offered the most defined position. This makes good sense as it represents the position of a single individual. This was followed by the Reformation Study Bible which offers the position of many individuals but each of them drawn from a very consistent theological position. The ESV Study Bible came next, offering a charitable but open view on most of these issues. The NIV Study Bible seemed almost to shy away from some of the issues. So while it is clear that the ESV Study Bible is not distinctly Reformed in its position, neither is it Arminian. It is not cessationist or continuationist and is neither amillennial nor premillennial. In fact, it seems as if it emulates the parent who tells one of his children to cut the last piece of cake in half and the other to choose the first piece. In many cases a person from one perspective wrote the notes while a person from the other perspective screened them. This ensures the notes maintain both charity and some degree of objectivity in those areas of dispute.Having looked at the areas of dispute, I would not hesitate to recommend the ESV Study Bible to either new or mature Christians. The matters at the heart of the faith are described and defended while the matters of lesser importance are presented charitably and non-dogmatically.ConclusionI suspect that many of the people reading this review will already be owners of at least one study Bible. I feel it is important to affirm that there is nothing innately wrong with the Reformation Study Bible, The New Geneva Study Bible, the MacArthur Study Bible and many of the other similar products. If you are currently using one of these Bibles and are happy with it, there may be fewer compelling reason to rush out and purchase the ESV Study Bible. I have used the Reformation Study Bible and its predecessor for many years with great benefit. I have no doubt that I will continue to refer to it.With that said, I think the ESV Study Bible is an incredible resource. A long list of endorsers have expressed their excitement for its theological faithfulness, its accessibility, its insight, its scholarship, its practicality and its sheer excellence. I would simply append my name to this list. I agree wholeheartedly with C.J. Mahaney who writes, "I can't imagine a greater gift to the body of Christ than the ESV Study Bible. It is a potent combination indeed: the reliability and readability of the ESV translation, supplemented by the best of modern and faithful scholarship, packaged in an accessible and attractive format. A Christian could make no wiser investment for himself, a pastor could recommend no better resource for his congregation." This is a powerful resource and one that can aid any reader of Scripture. It is one I recommend wholeheartedly.
M**B
Kindle version is incredible!
I have the book version of this bible and its a beast! So, for the price, I figured I wouldn't be crying if it wasn't a brilliant kindle version as I always have the book to go back to. Honestly, I'm surprised it's not charged more as a kindle version! I have the fire 10 and use the kindle app on it. This means all the pictures, info graphics, charts and maps are all in colour. The linkage from the text to the the notes, cross references, dictionary and so is superb and I've pretty much shelved my beloved paper version and happily use the kindle version. The guide at the beginning of this version explains how it all works and it took a read through once or twice to fully grasp it as it's a significant amount of text and how they've put it all together. I cannot comment on a kindle paper l, but on the kindle app on the fire tablet, it's the cats pyjamas!
N**S
ESV Bible on Kindle Paperwhite 10th 2018 PQ94WIF
Regarding ESV Bible on Kindle Paperwhite (10th generation 2018 model PQ94WIF):The ESV is not my favourite translation but I struggled to get a KJV with the following feature: to jump to a particular position it is possible with this Bible to tap the book, then chapter, and then page to the desired verse (thankfully the verses are numbered! One other ESV didn't have the verses). I've tried two other Bibles that didn't seem capable of this "easy navigate" feature and so then finding a particular verse becomes cumbersome. To navigate this Bible open it up (read it), tap top area of display to get menu, tap GO TO, scroll down (swipe) to and tap desired book, then tap on desired chapter, then page along to the desired verse. Reasonably quick! May God bless you.
R**L
Soft ward on my edition ectreme!y poor. Wish I never bought it,, , ,,,, ,,, ,,,
I bought the ERV yet Bible in December 2020 after reading the "raving" reviews. I try and read a different translation every year. I have a degree in Theology and I find the tranlation a little PC. The notes are interesting.......My biggest annoyance (I am using a Kindle Fire HD 8 10th generation) the soft ware crashes, freezes, when you return to txt after reading the notes it won't respond it closes the book and you have to re open the the book again and againđąđ«. You might read it for an hour but spend 35 minutes waiting for it to open up or respond. Very đdisappointed.
P**K
a Bible for those who "study"
I can't remember why I choose to buy this particular version of a Kindle Bible (Oh yes I do, I wanted an ESV to complete my Kindle set of Bibles which I'm easily able to carry around with me). Anyway, once I'd got it downloaded, I found it to be so helpful with loads of amplifying explanations of verses and so many charts and diagrams. A really helpful feature is that each of the charts and diagrams can be viewd on a web page if you need to see it in greater detail.Another helpful feature is the "Index" facility where you are able to type in a short code for each book and then a chapter number and you can quickly go to that new reference. So, for instance, if you're currently reading in Isaiah chapter 53 and need to quickly jump to John chapter 3, you simply hit the facilities key on the Kindle, click down to "Index" and type in "Jn 3" and there you are. I find this a much quicker system for re-direction than many others.I have a number of study type Bibles and find this one to be the best (from my personal point of view)
J**0
Lovely size good quality
This is the first time I've bought an interleave bible and I love it. It's bigger than my other bibles. I enjoy doing artwork in a journalling bible and this gives me more space to paint or write notes
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