Looks pretty interesting. I hope it doesn't lag behind like the EEC though
https://lexhampress.com/evangelical-biblical-theology-commentary
I had trouble preordering from that link earlier but not from the Logos version: https://www.logos.com/product/194957/evangelical-biblical-theology-commentary-part-1
Looks pretty interesting. I hope it doesn't lag behind like the EEC though https://lexhampress.com/evangelical-biblical-theology-commentary I had trouble preordering from that link earlier but not from the Logos version: https://www.logos.com/product/194957/evangelical-biblical-theology-commentary-part-1
A little math puts the price for the total set at ~ $1,760. Looks interesting. Schreiner and Köstenberger are solid. But, plunking down $160 sight unseen; waiting 6 mos for five titles. With the EEC experience I'm shy. I think I'll wait; not to mention that the discount is thin. If I use my Lexham discount from Connect I get 25%.
This looks like a rebranding of https://www.bhpublishinggroup.com/categories/biblical-theology-for-christian-proclamation-commentary/ based upon the authors of the 3 volumes promoted by BH.
Sample: https://blog.logos.com/2020/08/who-wrote-hebrews-why-it-may-not-be-paul/
Thanks all, the series started out under B&H as noted. They published three volumes and those are part of the initial launch of our series. The volumes that are on preorder are all written and in various stages of editorial, so we're confident we'll see them in good time. We also have more volumes in the door that are being reviewed, so we should see a solid release schedule. We have really great authors signed up and we're excited about the series!
But, plunking down $160 sight unseen; waiting 6 mos for five titles.
Five months for five titles, technically. And about a year for the sixth.
How different will Firth's commentary on Joshua be from his Bible Speaks Today Commentary?
By the way, if you own the Expositor's Bible Commentary Revised Edition, then you don't need the EBTC on the pastoral epistles by Andreas Kostenberger. The Expositor's BC is virtually identical, but has more comments and bibliography and was also written by Andreas Kostenberger. I own both copies and I prefer the full unabridged version in the EBC Revised Ed. The EBTC is a condensed version in my opinion.
DAL
Ps. Now to your question: It's probably going to overlap a lot. Rarely does an author write different content on a commentary on the same book of the Bible. Most just reword here and there and push it out under a different title to make an extra buck for a different publisher.
Anyone else surprised this wasn't included in a L9 package? I would have thought this or the Lexham Geographic set would have made it in there