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  • The Orthodox Study Bible: Ancient Christianity Speaks to Today's World
    The Orthodox Study Bible: Ancient Christianity Speaks to Today's World

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    Author: Thomas Nelson
    Publisher: Thomas Nelson
    Category: Book

    List Price: $49.99
    Buy New: $26.89
    You Save: $23.10 (46%)



    New (28) Used (8) from $26.89

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 41 reviews
    Sales Rank: 18477

    Media: Hardcover
    Number Of Items: 1
    Pages: 1824
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8
    Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.7 x 1.7

    ISBN: 0718003594
    Dewey Decimal Number: 220
    EAN: 9780718003593
    ASIN: 0718003594

    Publication Date: June 17, 2008
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Customer Reviews:
    Showing reviews 11-15 of 41
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    5 out of 5 stars Great Introduction to Orthodoxy   November 26, 2008
     0 out of 1 found this review helpful

    I have really enjoyed my copy of the Orthodox Study Bible. I come from a primarily "Protestant" background and the short introduction to the Orthodox Church was very helpful for me to understand just who is the Orthodox Church. I'm sure there is much more to know than the information contained in the short introduction, but it is a good starting point for someone who has no idea.

    I found the other introductory material very informative as well, such as a chart showing differences between the Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Protestant canons as well as a short overview of all of the books. The introduction to each of the books is to-the-point. The font used in printing is easy on the eyes.

    But what makes this Bible unique is the English translation from the Septuagint and the notes throughout the text. The Old Testament text is very readable and in modern vernacular. The verse notes are "stable," in that they are based on a tradition that advocates reading the Scriptures in community rather than the latest fad.

    One thing I miss in this particular volume is a bookmark. I know, it's a small thing, and there are plenty of things around I can use instead, but that would be a nice feature for future printings.



    5 out of 5 stars Reading Scripture with the Orthodox   November 22, 2008
     1 out of 4 found this review helpful

    Mention "theosis" to the average Reformation Christian, and you'll get an earful. Mention the "filioque" to a history-minded Roman Catholic and expect a short lecture. But frankly, most Western Christians' knowledge of Orthodox theology and practice is remarkably thin. Remarkable because the Orthodox preserve traditions going back to those found in the Didache and other ancient Christian manuals.

    Now, mention Orthodox Bible study, and there are probably more than a few Orthodox who will think you've confused them with Evangelicals. No more. The Orthodox Study Bible is a rich, attractive, and deeply Eastern introduction to how the Orthodox read Scripture and root their tradition within its witness.

    In typical Orthodox fashion, the annotations and notes are heavy with the insights of the Church Fathers in both the English translation of the Septuagint and the NKJV New Testament. Beautifully reproduced icon prints are scattered throughout the book, all of which illustrate biblical themes.

    I recommend adding the Orthodox Study Bible to your library of exegetical tools. It will enrich your understanding of how the whole Church has read the Bible from the earliest days of the Faith. Mining the depths of the fullness of biblical truth is a lifelong project that cannot afford to exclude such rich, ancient voices.



    4 out of 5 stars Connecting to Early Christianity   November 18, 2008
     3 out of 4 found this review helpful

    In the past month, [.....] has had visitors from six other countries and thirty-two other states. The internet is an incredible avenue of communication that reminds us we live in a global context. Sometimes we need this kind of geographical reminder. It puts my culture and worldview in perspective, when I realize there are other Christians spread throughout the earth. In much the same way it is important for us to realize that Christianity has been around for about two millenniums now.

    Sometimes we need to be reminded that we are not the only Christians. We should relish an awareness of those who have gone before us, laying a path of faithfulness to God. The Orthodox Study Bible published by Thomas Nelson in 2008, is a reference volume that helps accomplish just that. Although the New Testament and Psalms were released in 1993 with study notes, this 2008 edition is the first which includes the full Orthodox canon. The Old Testament text of this edition is a translation of the Septuagint into English in a style mimicking the New King James Version.

    Since I am an evangelical Christian rather than an Orthodox Christian, I will not pretend to review this study Bible from an Orthodox perspective. If you search the internet with any sense of tenacity, you will find a number of Orthodox critiques of the OSB. What I can do in this forum is offer you my opinion on the value of the OSB for the typical evangelical believer.

    I am reviewing the hardcover version of the OSB; it is also available in bonded and genuine leather. The text is a readable font in a good size. The study notes are slightly different in format than the biblical text, but still very readable. The OSB does not feature cross-references within the text, but they are included in many of the study notes. Pull-page iconographic art is scattered throughout the text. Features beyond the study notes that some evangelicals might benefit from include the Introduction to the Orthodox Church, Lectionary, and Morning and Evening Prayers. More complete and useful editions of this type of content could be accessed in a one-volume introduction to Orthodoxy such as James Payton's Light from the Christian East: An Introduction to the Orthodox Tradition or Vladimir Lossky's Orthodox Theology: An Introduction.

    The real value in the OSB for evangelical readers lies in the Old Testament. Here you have a reliable English translation of the Septuagint, used by early Christians and quoted in the New Testament. The Orthodox canon and book order may cause some confusion to the average reader, but the benefit some may feel from reading in a very real sense the Old Testament of many early Christians will outweigh this confusion. OSB study notes are insightful into early interpretations particularly of the Old Testament, but also the New. All Christians come through a common lineage with Orthodoxy, so the OSB will be of value and use to anyone who feels a need for this connection to early Christianity. I recommend that an evangelical interested in Orthodox Christianity purchase a one-volume introduction as referenced above. The OSB will be particularly useful to those interested in reading a translation of the Greek Old Testament familiar to our predecessors in the faith, and can also be used in conjunction with other resources as an introduction to Orthodoxy.



    5 out of 5 stars Appreciative Anglican   October 26, 2008
     1 out of 2 found this review helpful

    Not having had the New Testament only version of this study Bible, I couldn't compare the study notes. But I love this Bible. The study notes are not the over-intellectual factoid based fare found in most study Bibles. The overwhelming focus of most of the comments seems to be "This is how this verse relates to Jesus, His ministry and His Church." The editors are not shy about their belief that the Orthodox Church is the "Only True Church" but,as an Anglican, I can enjoy the faithful insights of the Church Fathers, the wonderful icons, and the bonus of being able to read and enjoy all of the Bible that Jesus and the Apostles read and referred to. The bonded leather binding is luxurious, making this large Bible easy to hold and read.


    4 out of 5 stars PRELIMINARY REVIEW   October 5, 2008
     4 out of 7 found this review helpful

    Normally I don't do this... I'll give a product a good going over before I review it. However this is "on order" as a gift from a family member, but I couldn't wait, I saw it in the store and thumbed through it for a few minutes.

    My initial impressions appear here. Set aside the "controversy" you've been seeing on here (granted, I'm Catholic, not Orthodox, so I might be missing something). This is a translation of the Septuagint (Greek Old Testament), and the New Testament is the New King James Version.

    This is a nice hardcover Bible, with some big colorful icons interspersed. There are nice introductions and foot notes for each book, traditional interpretations of what each book says and who wrote it, plus extensive prayers, "how to read the bible," canon lists, and liturgical calendar type stuff in the back (maps and the like as well).

    As expected, this includes the Deuterocanonical books found in Catholic bibles, placed in the traditional order for Orthodox (Orthodox view the Septuagint itself, which always included these "extra" books not found in the Hebrew, as the inspired canon of the "Old Testament") plus the Anagignoskenomena not found in the Catholic canon (ex: 3 Maccabees, 1 Esdras). Some of the books are named differently as well, keeping with Orthodox tradition (1-2 Samuel and 1-2 Kings are known as "1-4 Kingdoms").

    I didn't check to see if the Psalms were numbered according to the LXX or were the Septuagint (rather than Masoretic) translation. I know that was a sticking point with some Orthodox, but I didn't have the time to compare.

    This provides a both a handy reference for the Bible, from a Christian believer's standpoint, and also a nice introduction to some basic Orthodoxy for non-Orthodox.

    I liked the fact that the CHURCH FATHERS are referenced in the footnotes, showing for example what John Chrysostom thought of certain passages of the Gospel of John.

    The trouble is, and hopefully this will be fixed in a future addition, there is no SPECIFIC CITATION given. So if I want to know in what book John Chrysostom said such and such, I have go to looking through his complete works to find out. Not everyone realizes you can look that stuff up online, but it would have been nicer, if they had done the quotations like David Bercot's "A Dictionary of Early Christian Beliefs" which gave specific citations. So we're just trusting the author that the Patristic writer really said this somewhere (though it may be a paraphrase).

    The pages are thinner than expected and the book is surprisingly lightweight, but feels good in the hands. The paper isn't too cheap (I hate "newsprint" type bibles).

    I'll probably revise this once I own the thing myself and have more time to use it, but for now, it's worth getting... an above average Bible, and has a certain "one-of-a-kind-ness" to it even if you already own a half a dozen Bibles (like I do).

    Oh, and it's missing 4 Maccabees, but then I guess that text was never considered "canonical" by the Eastern Orthodox church, and was only in an "appendix" to the Septuagint (unlike 1-3 Maccabees).

    What I've seen so far is good, though there could be a few improvements (like direct citations of the Patristic commentary).



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