How About Adding These Books To Logos From Gordon Fee?

God's Empowering Presence: The Holy Spirit In the Letters of Paul
Pauline Christology: An Exegetical- Theological Study
Galatians: A Pentecostal Commentary
First and Second Timothy & Titus - NIB Commentary
Paul, The Spirit, and the People of God
Listening to the Spirit in the Text
Gospel and Spirit, Issues in New Testament Hermeneutics
Revelation - New Covenant Commentary Series
Discovering Biblical Equality
Would any others like to see these in Logos?
Comments
-
[Y] I would.
Logos 7 Collectors Edition
0 -
ASUS ProArt x570s Creator, AMD R9 5950x, HyperX 64gb 3600 RAM, ASUS Strix RTX 2080 ti
"The Unbelievable Work...believe it or not." Little children...Biblical prophecy is not Christianity's friend.
0 -
MacBook Pro (2019), ThinkPad E540
0 -
[Y] and John Wimber, Jack Deere, Watchman Nee, stuff from Bridge-Logos, C. Peter Wagner, Stan Horton, and more!!!!
0 -
Pastor Jesse Blevins said:
God's Empowering Presence: The Holy Spirit In the Letters of Paul
Pauline Christology: An Exegetical- Theological Study
Galatians: A Pentecostal Commentary
Paul, The Spirit, and the People of God
Listening to the Spirit in the Text
Gospel and Spirit, Issues in New Testament Hermeneutics
Revelation - New Covenant Commentary Series
Would any others like to see these in Logos?
+1 [Y]
These that you mentioned are already in Logos:
First and Second Timothy & Titus - NIB Commentary
David Paul said:Gordon Fee was brought up Pentecostal and still maintains that interest in pneumatology and that fire of the Spirit in him. But he has broken the Pentecostal mold. He was one of my professors at Regent College, and he told us the story of how as a young man he felt called to do advanced academic study, when that was something that Pentecostals did not do. He struggled with the call for some time, having no role models within his tradition. He read a letter to the editor in a Pentecostal magazine by an uneducated pastor who was blasting those who did what Gordon was contemplating doing. This letter was an impassioned claim that scholarship was the sure way to lose your faith. It pitted being on fire for God with having a keen mind, as if it were an either/or proposition. Gordon cried out to God at that time, asking him how he could be feeling this desire for advanced learning if it was so awful for his love of God? God assured him that he could do both, and he has gone on to do just that. He was the first Pentecostal ever to earn a PhD in the US, I believe. Or at least you could count them on the fingers of one hand when he got his. Anyway, he is a trailblazer, a passionate man of God, but also a brilliant scholar and very well respected by all his colleagues from other denominations at Regent. I think Pentecostals nowadays can be proud to claim him as one of their own, though there are still probably some who are skeptical of that level of academic achievement, and the whole endeavor of biblical criticism which is among Gordon Fee's fortes.
0 -
Todd, thanks for opening that link in a separate window...wish everyone would do that with their links. [Y]
Rosie Perera said:Gordon Fee was brought up Pentecostal and still maintains that interest in pneumatology and that fire of the Spirit in him. But he has broken the Pentecostal mold. He was one of my professors at Regent College, and he told us the story of how as a young man he felt called to do advanced academic study, when that was something that Pentecostals did not do. He struggled with the call for some time, having no role models within his tradition. He read a letter to the editor in a Pentecostal magazine by an uneducated pastor who was blasting those who did what Gordon was contemplating doing. This letter was an impassioned claim that scholarship was the sure way to lose your faith. It pitted being on fire for God with having a keen mind, as if it were an either/or proposition. Gordon cried out to God at that time, asking him how he could be feeling this desire for advanced learning if it was so awful for his love of God? God assured him that he could do both, and he has gone on to do just that. He was the first Pentecostal ever to earn a PhD in the US, I believe. Or at least you could count them on the fingers of one hand when he got his. Anyway, he is a trailblazer, a passionate man of God, but also a brilliant scholar and very well respected by all his colleagues from other denominations at Regent. I think Pentecostals nowadays can be proud to claim him as one of their own, though there are still probably some who are skeptical of that level of academic achievement, and the whole endeavor of biblical criticism which is among Gordon Fee's fortes.
Interesting.
Well, I've got some resources to hide now, I suppose.
[:D]
lol...jk
[:P]
I have to admit, I'd like to take a look at Fee's Pauline Christology: An Exegetical-Theological Study. I bet that's a real hoot!
ASUS ProArt x570s Creator, AMD R9 5950x, HyperX 64gb 3600 RAM, ASUS Strix RTX 2080 ti
"The Unbelievable Work...believe it or not." Little children...Biblical prophecy is not Christianity's friend.
0 -
David Paul said:
Todd, thanks for opening that link in a separate window...wish everyone would do that with their links.
I don't know how to do it, and haven't been able to distinguish a difference between the links people paste that open a new window and ones that don't. I actually prefer not having a new window open, because they proliferate and then you need to close them all.
0 -
Rosie Perera said:David Paul said:
Todd, thanks for opening that link in a separate window...wish everyone would do that with their links.
I don't know how to do it, and haven't been able to distinguish a difference between the links people paste that open a new window and ones that don't. I actually prefer not having a new window open, because they proliferate and then you need to close them all.
If you just paste in a URL (which is what I did), the auto-generated link includes target="_blank", which forces it to a new window/tab. I really shouldn't be commended for it, because I didn't do it--the forum software did.
If you use the link button to create a link, the default setting does not include that setting. That option is available in the link entry window, though, for those that want to use it.
I don't normally bother setting the target, because I don't really care that much. I usually expect links to open in the same window, and if I don't want that, I will drag the link to a new tab in Firefox as my method of opening it.
MacBook Pro (2019), ThinkPad E540
0 -
David Paul said:
Todd, thanks for opening that link in a separate window...wish everyone would do that with their links.
No thanks! I absolutely hate it when links open in new windows! If I want them to open in a new tab, I cmd-click. Otherwise, I expect and want them to open in the same tab, not where someone else has decided that I should have them. If you want them to open in a new window, I'm sure there's a key you can press while clicking, in order to get it that way. Or right-click should do the same thing.
Mac Pro (late 2013) OS 12.6.2
0 -
I'd love to see these books in Logos. At the moment I'm particularly interested in Fee on Galatians.
0 -
Now all of these are available in Logos:
Jesse Blevins said:God's Empowering Presence: The Holy Spirit In the Letters of Paul
Pauline Christology: An Exegetical- Theological Study
First and Second Timothy & Titus - NIB Commentary [NIBC has been rebranded as Understanding the Bible Commentary Series]
Revelation - New Covenant Commentary Series
Getting the rest is still a good goal:
Jesse Blevins said:Galatians: A Pentecostal Commentary
Paul, The Spirit, and the People of God
Listening to the Spirit in the Text
Gospel and Spirit, Issues in New Testament Hermeneutics
I would also like to see this available in Logos once again, as I never managed to acquire it when it was available in the past:
This small booklet (31 pp.) would also be useful:
0 -
Thanks for that background info on Dr. Fee Rosie, it was very interesting to me. More years ago than I care to admit Dr. Fee was one of my professors at Southern California College (now Vanguard University). I have just recently gotten back into reading some of his stuff whenever I get a chance.
I would like to see as many books as possible from Dr. Fee in my Logos library. I think he has a lot to offer whether a reader if Pentecostal or not.
0 -
Make that "whether a reader is Pentecostal or not."
0 -
Gordon Fee is a solid, biblical scholar. His work speaks for itself.
A resounding "Yes" to more of his titles in Logos.
And thanks Rosie for your input on this; always a blessing.
0 -
Rosie Perera said:
Will they break this collection ever? Otherwise I have to forget about that books in Logos and get them from Amazon. [:(]
Bohuslav
0 -
Bohuslav Wojnar said:Rosie Perera said:
Will they break this collection ever? Otherwise I have to forget about that books in Logos and get them from Amazon.
I have no crystal ball. You could put in a request on the "Hey! they just broke this collection up!" thread and see what happens.
0