A number of publishers and resource providers have made their journal articles and books available freely on the internet during the present coronavirus pandemic. Steve Walton has compiled those which are relevant to New Testament Studies into an editable Google doc.
Anyone with the link can access the document, and others are invited to add links to other freely available resources for New Testament studies, so that we can help each other in the present situation.
Also, Logos is currently producing a Remote Learning Library that includes all Mobile Ed courses, all Lexham resources (including commentaries and monographs), a Classical Scholarship Collection, and some additional journals. Stay tuned for more, a link will be posted here soon.
Stay safe everyone, and let’s all use this time of isolation productively, both in our research and with our families.
Links not working
Try again; it works for me.
I wanted to see your free (thanks!) resources, but the links don’t work for me. I’ve tried different things, like opening and closing the browser; no luck.
The link for an editable Google doc is working for me. When you get to the page, you need to click on what looks like a link, and then click the popup link.
Zondervan does have a link hello.
The links given appear to be a screenshot of Steve’s computer screen and therefore does not carry the underlying information.
A quick search of the subjects resulted in these links for me which are not definitive but may lead in the right direction.
Hopefully the underlying data follows. If not type/copy-paste into your address bar.
https://biblicalstudies.org.uk/
https://www.cambridge.org/core/what-we-publish/textbooks
https://about.jstor.org/oa-and-free/
Mohr Siebeck https://www.doabooks.org/doab?func=publisher&pId=1549&uiLanguage=en
https://about.muse.jhu.edu/muse/open-access-overview/
https://zondervanacademic.com/instructor-resources
The link to the editable doc is in the blog post itself.
It seems that when I right click, I get the picture save as… menu.
This is a picture, not an active link…
So it will not work.
Thanks.
Click the link in the blog post.
Click the blue ink words namely, “an editable Google doc” within the article itself. Then click on the link you need with in the Goggle doc. The other is a picture and of course pictures don’t embed links therefore use the hyperlink within the article.
Are there any free such offerings for Old Testament studies already available or soon to be available? Thanks
I haven’t seen one yet. Will post here if somebody creates one.