
Of all the things I could highlight during Logos’s Black Friday Sale (weekend, really), I’ve chosen The Romans Collection, currently 80% off.
This set of resources pulls at my (intellectual and spiritual) heartstrings for two reasons:
- I did my PhD on Romans and love this epistle of Paul dearly after having spent so much time in the original Greek, and in thousands of books and journal articles discussing the letter.
- I love preaching from Romans, teaching about Romans, and reading through Romans.
Whether your study and reading of Romans is for the purpose of earning a degree, preaching to a church body, or teaching your own heart to yearn for fellowship and the return of the Second Adam, The Romans Collection will bolster your academic and spiritual foray into the letter.
The only question I have for you is this: will you be able to read all 40,000 pages in over 90 commentaries included in this collection? Perhaps not for some time.
But anytime you approach even a single verse in Paul’s great letter from now on, you’ll have a deluge of mentors at your side walking you through every jot and tittle (and perhaps arguing with each other along the way). Contributors include Ben Witherington III, Leon Morris, N.T. Wright, Craig S. Keener, Robert Mounce, R.C. Sproul, John Calvin, Charles Gore, Frédérick Louis Godet and more.
Don’t miss this incredible Black Friday offer to get The Romans Collection at 80% off.
I think that I have most of these resources already in my Library and besides that it is a little pricey for me.
What many if not most Commentaries on the Roman(s) scroll are concerned with, reflect their own perspective on their view(s) of the Bible as a whole. What I find pathetic is leaving out Romans 1:16, as a Doctrinal Imperative & the total absence of any emphasis on building Doctrine from the Book reflecting this imperative while doing so. While emphasized in most Messianic publications, Logos is not very good at promoting them, let aside including any solid Biblical Messianic scholarship on the subject.
This persists on my home page, reminding me that I missed the Black Friday sale… cruel.