2 questions!
1) Anyone have any good or bad thoughts about this resource? Just curious
2) Is it on sale? I don't see it on the Easter sale page but it is listed as 30% off. Not sure if that is the always price or it is on sale but not listed.
https://www.logos.com/product/52879/jerusalem-in-the-time-of-jesus
Not showing on sale on your link.
And are you really questioning Prof Metzger's judgment? Smiling. It's interesting, since Metzger was said to have encyclopiac recall.
But the author is quite knowledgable ... near the end of a long career.
Haha never. Mine shows 19.99 original 28.99
It's a classic, though I've never read it so I can't add my personal recommendation to Metzger's and the 5-star reviews on Amazon. I had it in dead-tree format before I got it in Logos.
Here are a couple of Amazon reviews:
Reviewed in the United States on August 27, 2021
Check your dynamic pricing; it might be cheaper in this Expansion: https://www.logos.com/product/204628/logos-9-bible-backgrounds-library-expansion-m
DAL
$19.99 is the regular price on Logos; the digital list price is publisher suggested.
Haha never. Mine shows 19.99 original 28.99 $19.99 is the regular price on Logos; the digital list price is publisher suggested.
That is what I thought. When I saw the 30% off I thought maybe a sale. I couldn't pass up on the 75% off Factbook expansion so I threw this in with it. I have no doubt it'll be worth it's $20
We used it Seminary along with Bo Reicke. It's dated, but still useful. I paid 28.99 US back in 2016.
Mattillo:
in a Hebraic thought mobile ed course, it was suggested that punishment sometimes was due to failure to care for vulnerable persons, which was kind of an implied duty for the community under God's pact. (Prophets warning about it).
Too bad the resource does not deal with this particularly. Neither was I able to find the "every man under a fig and olive tree" of social justice principle.
Also no analysis from a worldview point of view. Was the Hebrew worldview much different than the Christian one? maybe in some deep aspects is not, but is not analyzed under the rubric.
If modern analysis was incorporated into some of the book info, it would be really good from my point of view.
So how much were the chosen ones taking care of the vulnerable? how much were they encouraging all from developing wisdom and discernment in the Hebraic traditional way? was such omission cause of the Kingdom given to others (ie Christians)?
Just from looking at the toc, it does not seem to be organized to answer such, maybe some info will be useful to try to explore such, but unfortunately the book does not seem to be written with such analysis in mind.
It gives pixels of life, that point towards specialization and elitism, which may be why God was not very satisfied with what was happening at the time.
Specialization for economics and politics seem right, but spiritually all had the duty to develop wisdom and discernment to be able to carry out the intent of God in all areas, or so it seems.
Just a different angle.