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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
New Compact Dictionary of the Bible,
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Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: NIV Compact Dictionary of the Bible (Paperback)
Wonderful tool in studying the Bible. Definitely a help in studying the word of God and developing my faith.
1.0 out of 5 stars
FOR KINDLE VERSION ONLY,
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This review is from: Zondervan Bible Dictionary (NIV Compact Series) (Kindle Edition)
Please note, this review is based on the Kindle version of this book, and the review is based strictly on the FORMATTING (not the CONTENT) of the book. I rated this e-book with only 1 star because the formatting makes it extremely difficult to navigate. The table of contents has only a few sections: 1.) How to Use This Book, 2.) Survey of the Bible and Bible Times, 3.) Dictionary, and 4.) Names Not Listed in the Dictionary. There are no further subdivisions. So, for example, if you want to go to the dictionary, it brings you immediately to the entry for "Aaron", and that is the only starting point within the dictionary. As far as I can tell, the only alternative is to search by keyword, which is extremely cumbersome. For example: The first search I tried was "Jeremiah", which gave me 160 hits throughout the entire text. So far as I can tell, there's no way to isolate the actual dictionary entry for Jeremiah without also bringing up all the cross-references. The net result is that this book is completely useless to me in the electronic format.
5.0 out of 5 stars
NIV Compact Dictionary of the Bible,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: NIV Compact Dictionary of the Bible (Paperback)
Very detailed Bible dictionary. Its size makes it very easry to carry with you. I recommend that you buy one if you are looking for more details. Very compact as the title displays.
7 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
one of the best dictionaries of the bible words,
By A Customer
This review is from: NIV Compact Dictionary of the Bible (Paperback)
NIV-version is one of the best translations,and this dictionary is most helpful if you like deeper understanding of bible words.
8 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Learned, capable defence of bad science and bad Christianity,
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This review is from: NIV Compact Dictionary of the Bible (Paperback)
The stereotypical view of American Fundamentalists is of chinless, in-bred, redneck ignorami with the brain functions of a warthog. One could wish that it were so; but in actual fact, Fundamentalists can be highly intelligent, widely educated, and quite good writers. What is more, in the desperate attempt to suit their crazed beliefs to any kind of reality, they are capable of astonishing creativity; witness for instance the recent Fundamentalist "study" of Greek literature by Robert Bowie Johnson, Jr., ATHENA AND KAIN: THE TRUE MEANING OF GREEK MYTH, more akin to a science-fiction or fantasy novel than to anything describeable as scholarship, but almost dazzling in its prodigies of misinvention and misassociation.The present dictionary is a fair, one might almost say a moderate, study of the central object of their obsessions. Much of it can be of use to anyone interested in the Bible: neither the Hebrew etymologies nor much of the historical material can be reproached. It is only when we come to such statements as that Moses actually spoke the words of Deuteronomy (page 303), which no serious scholar believes, or the nuanced but unmistakable assertions contained in the entry "creation" (pp.133-135) that one catches sight of the authors' real agenda: the denial of scientific evidence and the revolt against reason - and as Chesterton said, to revolt against reason is bad theology. But it is not only the basic irrationality of Fundamentalism that is unorthodox and unChristian: bad theology is much closer to the surface. While it might not interest non-Christian readers, the book's explanation of the Hebrew name of God is so heretical that I want to quote it in full: "The name is related to the Hebrew verb 'to be', 'to be actually present'. 'I am who I am' means either 'I am actively present as and when I choose' or 'I bring to pass whatever I choose'." That it might simply mean, what it was translated to mean in the Italian Bible I read as a child; what Our Lord clearly understood it to mean when he said "before Abraham or Isaac was, I AM"; what the verb demands that it should mean - I am He Who is; I am the actually existent - does not seem to occur to messrs. Douglas and Tenney. They prefer a meaning that would cover any supernatural being - "I am actually present as and when I choose" - or one that describes a tyrant with no moral connotation - "I bring to pass whatever I choose". What is cryingly obvious is that both of these mistranslations refuse to deal with Existence itself, dodging the suspicion that God might, after all, have anything to do with it; preferring to concentrate on the gaudy externals of mere power - He appears ("I am actually present as and when I choose"); He does things, preferably miraculous ones ("I bring to pass whatever I choose"). This is not only rotten explanation, but shows a habit of mind to avoid central issues and focus on the externals of power, such as we see in the constant Fundamentalist stress on "miracles" and "healing". All the same, Christians interested in Bible studies could do worse - taking due precautions - than to get a copy of this book. Its scholarship, within its own terms, is quite good, and the format is both compact and comprehensive. It is exactly the fact that this is respectable work done by respectable people, that shows the sheer danger of Fundamentalism. |
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NIV Compact Dictionary of the Bible by J. D. Douglas (Paperback - January 1, 1999)
$9.99
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