Digital Logos Edition
The Apostolic Study Bible Notes equip Pentecostals for deeper, more informed Bible study. Utilize study helps from Oneness Pentecostal scholars, maps, and a concordance created with emphasis on key words for Oneness Pentecostals. The notes give special emphasis to passages of Scripture that are important to the Apostolic message, and book introductions and outlines call attention to key Apostolic insights, important themes, as well as authorship, date, and other significant information. This resource also includes articles on Pentecostal distinctives of holiness, the new birth, living in covenant, miracles, and more by scholars such as David K. Bernard, Daniel Segraves, and David Norris.
With Logos Bible Software, this resource is fully searchable and enhanced with cutting-edge research tools. Important terms link to dictionaries, encyclopedias, and a wealth of other resources in your digital library. Powerful topical searches help you find exactly what you’re looking for. Tablet and mobile apps let you take the discussion with you. With Logos Bible Software, the most efficient and comprehensive research tools are in one place, so you get the most out of your study.
Please note: The Apostolic Study Bible Notes does not include the Bible text itself. For the KJV Bible text, see The Holy Bible: King James Version (KJV).
“Although not the main point here, the statement ‘for by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body’ affirms that Spirit baptism is key to belonging to the body of Christ.” (Page 1850)
“God asked questions not to gain information, but to provide an opportunity for Adam to admit his sin. Rather than admitting his guilt, Adam blamed his wife and implicated God Himself in the sin. Eve blamed her failure on the deception of the serpent. 1 Timothy 2:14 shows that her sin came out of deception, but Adam was not deceived. This is probably why the Bible states sin entered the world through Adam’s rebellion (1 Cor. 15:21–22), rather than Eve’s transgression.” (Pages 22–23)
“Babel is almost certainly the same city as Babylon. Therefore, Babylon would have been the oldest city on earth.” (Page 33)
“Transgression did not come from the tree or its fruit, but the defiance of eating thereof against God’s commandment. God warned that such disobedience would surely bring death. Dying is not cessation of being, but separation. Spiritual death is separation from God and physical death is the separation of the spirit from the body. Spiritual death came immediately at the Fall, and the process of physical death also immediately began. In the day Adam ate thereof, the surety of death became a defining reality of the human condition.” (Page 21)
“Uncharacteristically, Moses did not give glory to God for the miracle about to occur, but rather claimed he and Aaron would bring water out of the rock. More than the specific act of disobedience in striking the rock instead of speaking to it, the fact that they did not trust God and honor Him before the people stirred God’s anger (v. 12).” (Page 262)
General Editor: Robin Johnston, PhD, Regent University
Managing Editor: Lee Ann Alexander, MACM (in progress), Urshan Graduate School of Theology MA, Southeastern Louisiana University
Old Testament Editors: Chris Paris, PhD, Vanderbilt University; H. Everett Gossard, MTS, Urshan Graduate School of Theology; Jeremy Painter, DLitt candidate, University of Pretoria and MDiv, Regent University
New Testament Editor: Jeffrey Brickle, PhD, Concordia Seminary, St. Louis
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