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Designed for the pastor and Bible teacher, the Zondervan Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament features today's top New Testament scholars and brings together commentary features rarely gathered together in one volume. With careful analysis and interpretation of the Greek text, the authors trace the flow of argument in each New Testament book, giving readers the tools they need to properly understand and communicate the meaning of the text.
Commentary on each passage follows a clear structure to help readers grasp the flow and meaning of the text:
The Zondervan Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament series is the go-to resource for pastors and Bible teachers looking for deep but accessible study that equips them to connect the needs of Christians today with the biblical text.
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“To be clear, John’s typology does not picture Nero himself returning but one in the end times who will be like Nero, characterized by even greater savagery and madness.” (Pages 445–446)
“Revelation is an explicitly Christian book and exalts God’s work in Jesus Christ from start to finish, but it is the Old Testament and its Jewish conceptions of God’s salvation and judgment now being fulfilled in Jesus that are central to John’s book as a whole.” (Page 42)
“And some decide that it was written not by the apostle but by another church leader, a prophet known to the churches of Asia Minor, also named John and influenced by the apostle.19 The final option is the conclusion followed in this commentary.” (Page 28)
“the clear symbolism here is that God and the Lamb are the ever-abundant source of life and health for their people” (Page 554)
“A better option is that the vision anticipates an earthly temple that will exist in Jerusalem at the cataclysmic time of future judgment just prior to the return of Christ to earth (i.e., at the time when the seal, trumpet, and bowl judgments occur as presented in chs. 6–16; cf. 2 Thess 2:4 that also assumes this scenario).” (Page 328)
Buist Fanning (DPhil, University of Oxford) is the department chair and senior professor of New Testament studies at Dallas Theological Seminary.
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