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Paperback The Epistle of Paul to the Romans: An Introduction and Commentary Book

ISBN: 0802814050

ISBN13: 9780802814050

The Epistle of Paul to the Romans: An Introduction and Commentary

(Book #6 in the Tyndale New Testament Commentaries Series)

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Book Overview

While Romans has been among the most influential books of the New Testament, it has also been the subject of some of the church's most heated debates. In the concise and informative style that has... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Bold Stances

A wonderful commentary on the book of Romans. Emphasis placed on earliest textual evidence, not shying away from those passages that are not backed by Biblical scholarship. The best part of the book is a wonderful argument in favor of the newer translations over the Authorized, or King James, version. Quote: "The later English versions - in particular the Revised Version of 1881 (with its American counterpart, the American Standard Version of 1901), the Revised Standard Version of 1946-52, and the New English Bible of 1961 - represent a much more accurate Greek text than did the Authorized Version."

Superior Commentary for the Lay Scholar. Buy It!

`Roman', an exegesis on Paul's Epistle to the Romans by F. F. Bruce is an excellent mid-level commentary on this most important book of the Christian New Testament. I am reviewing a 1985 Second edition which has many notable improvements over the 1963 First Edition, especially the switch to the RSV translation and consultations with some of the most important scholarly commentaries on `Romans' such as the one done by Ernst Kasemann. One of the few problems with Professor Bruce's edition is that it falls smack in the middle of Bible commentary styles. It is seriously scholarly, especially in it's very important interest in avoiding `political correctness' when covering some of Paul's stronger opinions possibly not too popular in today's world. On the other hand, the book belongs to a `popular' series, `The Tyundale New Testament Commentaries' and it aims at serving the lay Bible Study audience. Since I believe that when dealing with serious and difficult subjects, it is best not to lead your audience into a false sense of simplicity, I applaud Professor Bruce's leaning in the direction of the scholarly, with battalions of footnotes, Greek and Aramaic texts, and careful expositions on central concepts such as `flesh', `spirit', and `righteousness'. Thus, Bruce is deeper and potentially more satisfying than William Barclay's `The Letter to the Romans', which has few of these. Bruce's analysis of Paul's letter is distinctly more carefully thought out than Barclay's one-dimensional list of subjects. Oddly, Bruce diverges substantially from both Kasemann and N. T. Wright in his commentary in `The New Interpreter's Bible' in his outline of the Epistle around Chapter 3 Verse 20. In this, he follows the scholarly Kasemann's lead, so I anticipate he has important good scholarship on his side. Aside from the scholarly (Kasemann) and the lay (Bruce, Barclay, and Wright) commentaries, one may also wish to consider the theologically based commentaries from, for example Martin Luther and John Barth. These approaches may be great for a history of ideas, but they are to be avoided as a best source of what Paul was really saying. Luther and other early Reformation leaders saw Paul as a supporter of their own agenda. But, while Luther may have been seeing Paul correctly on many points, he may also have been misreading Paul's emphasis and especially misreading him on Paul's analysis of the failure of the Jews. My first choice for a lay commentary is Wright's monograph cited above. The only problem with that is that you need to buy the whole volume X or read it while sitting in your library's reference room stacks. On the other side of the coin, if you or your church can spring for the entire `New Interpreter's Bible', you have scholarly works on the entire scripture. And, I find Wright's text easier for aging eyes to read, and his bibliography is more current (however, I found nothing of importance missing from Bruce's bibliography).

So good I have to say it in spanish... muy bien!

An very sound commentary on the book of Romans by F.F. Bruce. Bruce explains well Paul's stance on righteousness, faith, the Law and it's modern application to the Church of God. He shows that Paul does indeed distinguish between the natural Jews, and the Spiritual Jews.Bruce also fills you in on the historical setting in which Paul wrote the epistle to the Romans, and concerning the possible additions to the text. Bruce breaks Romans up into several sections so you can better analyize the book of Romans and a quickly make reference. Full of wonderful quotes of not only other commentaries on Romans, but some very excellent sayings of Bruce himself. A very insightful commentary that everybody should own.A favorite quote of mine from the book...Should a man not lay his hand upon his mouth before he criticizes his brethren? When we pass swift, uninformed, unloving and ungenerous judgments, surely we have forgotten that if we speak evil of them, at the same time we speak evil of the Lord whose name they bear. p. 232
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