Digital Logos Edition
How can the task of biblical exegesis be fruitful and meaningful when commentaries and lexicons provide contradictory interpretations and seem to support opposing translations? The Exegetical Summaries Series asks important exegetical and interpretive questions—phrase-by-phrase—and summarizes and organizes the content from every major Bible commentary and dozens of lexicons. You can instantly identify exegetical challenges, discover a text’s interpretive history, and survey the scope of everything written about each verse and phrase. Take your exegesis to the next level with the Logos edition of An Exegetical Summary of Luke 1–11.
“A person should consider whether what he thinks is light could in fact be darkness [NIBC, NIGTC, NTC].” (Page 526)
“It was not a matter of inability but of unwillingness. He was not willing to do this” (Page 496)
“ In 11:33 the lamp is a metaphor for Jesus, but here it is a metaphor for a person’s reaction to Jesus [NAC].” (Page 526)
“QUESTION—What relationship is indicated by ὅτι ‘because’ in Jesus’ statement ‘because she loved much’?” (Page 323)
“and therefore such a person will not need a sign from heaven to recognize the truth [ICC].” (Page 527)
This series offers endless exegetical assistance…summarizing the major exegetical issues in interpretation… [It includes] comprehensive analysis of the raw data of the text.
—Online reviewer