It is not a good version. Made by a charismatic Pentecostal man. Not true to the oringal Septuagint and Koine Greek NT. Also does not have the 73 sacred books of the canon.
I would be very grateful if you could answer these three questions. 1. Which denomination are you sympathetic with, and why? 2. What Bible dictionary would you recomend? 3. What Bible commentary would you suggest? To me, Calvanism is a gospel of despair, and I don’t want to spend my money on a dictionary or commentary only to later find that it is bent to Calvanism. I know you’re a busy man, so I hope you will find time to reply. Kind regards Thomas
You should stick with Catholic bibles, especially the *Haydock Douay-Rheims bible.* The Haydock Bible is a larger-print (12 point) format Douay-Rheims Catholic Bible with a comprehensive Catholic commentary (210 sources used!) and an illustrated Catholic Bible Dictionary and History of the Books of Holy Scripture. It is a superiorly authentic translation in the English language or, more broadly, that the Douay is to be preferred over all other English translations of Scripture. The Douay-Rheims is certified Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur & has all 7 deuterocanonical books, and all chapters and verses of Daniel recognised by the Catholic cannon, which were also in the first few editions of KJV Bibles until they were removed from the KJV in 1666 AD. It is translated from the Latin Vulgate and compared to the Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek originals.
I think you need to contextualise queen Mary a bit more. Her father was of course king Henry VIII who started the anglican heresy and the persecution of the Catholics. Queen Mary was very fierce of course, but this was in response to the betrayal of the Apostolic faith that had been set in motion by her heresiarch father.
Thank you for this review. Calgary, Alberta
Very informative. Thank you! Could you do a video on the Dake Annotated Reference Bible?
It is not a good version. Made by a charismatic Pentecostal man. Not true to the oringal Septuagint and Koine Greek NT. Also does not have the 73 sacred books of the canon.
I would be very grateful if you could answer these three questions.
1. Which denomination are you sympathetic with, and why?
2. What Bible dictionary would you recomend?
3. What Bible commentary would you suggest?
To me, Calvanism is a gospel of despair, and I don’t want to spend my money on a dictionary or commentary only to later find that it is bent to Calvanism.
I know you’re a busy man, so I hope you will find time to reply.
Kind regards
Thomas
You should stick with Catholic bibles, especially the *Haydock Douay-Rheims bible.*
The Haydock Bible is a larger-print (12 point) format Douay-Rheims Catholic Bible with a comprehensive Catholic commentary (210 sources used!) and an illustrated Catholic Bible Dictionary and History of the Books of Holy Scripture.
It is a superiorly authentic translation in the English language or, more broadly, that the Douay is to be preferred over all other English translations of Scripture.
The Douay-Rheims is certified Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur & has all 7 deuterocanonical books, and all chapters and verses of Daniel recognised by the Catholic cannon, which were also in the first few editions of KJV Bibles until they were removed from the KJV in 1666 AD. It is translated from the Latin Vulgate and compared to the Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek originals.
I think you need to contextualise queen Mary a bit more. Her father was of course king Henry VIII who started the anglican heresy and the persecution of the Catholics. Queen Mary was very fierce of course, but this was in response to the betrayal of the Apostolic faith that had been set in motion by her heresiarch father.
thank you for historical perspective, theregent.
Where can I print out that chart? Thats good information
the website page it comes from no longer exits, but this is a link to an image search in which you'll find it. tinyurl.com/yz4mhc2p
@@faithministries62 thank you!