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I worked through the NT331 course this summer and I recommend it.
Also, I found this commentary helpful:
Johnson, Luke Timothy. Reading Romans: A Literary and Theological Commentary. Reading the New Testament Series. Macon, GA: Smyth & Helwys Publishing, 2001.
And this resource:
Hawthorne, Gerald F., Ralph P. Martin, and Daniel G. Reid, eds. Dictionary of Paul and His Letters. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1993.
There are many more good ones I did not mention.
@Ronald Quick - Romans is a great book to study!
As mentioned NT331 is something worth looking at. You might also look at bestcommentaries.com to read reviews on commentaries.
I see that you tagged your post 'Messianic Jewish Products', so assuming that is the direction you want to study Romans from, you might consider "Romans for the Practical Messianic" by J.K. McKee. It's not sold on Logos. Also look at Tim Hegg.
You might also use Google to look for materials focusing on Romans from a law-positive Christian tradition and check out the New Perspective on Paul.
Donovan: I thought the whole point of AI search is to replace Google search. Is there a way to do the Google search you recommend using Logos? Thanks
btw, how do I only include part of the quote in my post (like we used to do before)? Quoting the whole thing makes it difficult for the reader to figure out what we are responding to.
I believe in a Win-Win-Win God.
I used Google search as a generic term. I personally like Perplexity, and use it more than Google these days.
The quoting function is something that @Jason Stone (Logos) is looking at. It is a bit of a blunt tool. As a workaround, you can use the '>' to start a line and manually copy the text that you are quoting.
@Donovan R. Palmer you mentioned Tim Hegg's commentary on Romans. We now have 15 of his books available for pre-order, including the two Romans volumes.
Senior Publisher Relations Specialist • Logos Bible Software • Rick.Mansfield@logos.com
@Rick Mansfield (Logos) you are a Bible Software rock star! 💥🕺💥
The single best thing I've ever read on Romans—clearest and most helpful at explaining the flow of the letter and why it matters—is Gorman's new commentary.
Yup! That's the NISS one.
What I love about them is that this is Inductive Study. No commentaries (other than at the end of the lesson, which you're free to skip if you want) - just you, your bible, some colouring pencils, keywords and questions. Woohoo! I've been using them for 25 years. The Romans one in full version, took me about two years to do. LIFE-CHANGING FUN!!!