The First Edition Study Bible Jackpot!!
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- Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
- In this video I show a stack of study bibles I’ve acquired the last couple weeks. Some were given to me by a retired pastor, and some others I got while thrifting. I also show you how to find out where and when your Bible was printed, and if it is a first edition.
I never understood those numbers Pastor Tim. Thank you for sharing. 😊. Some of these look excellent. I once had the Full Life and lost it somewhere along the way. Watching your channel, I saw your review of the Fire Bible. Now I’ve got that and won’t let it go. I’ve got a Cambridge leather 2004 NIV Study Bible and the Max Lucado Bible you showed, also in leather. Trouble is - the print on the Lucado Bible is now a little small for me. Thx again. 😊
Thanks for sharing this with us Brother Tim. I learned something today. I actually have a few of these. 👏🌞
Nice stack of Study Bibles.
I gave away several of those Bibles: Max Lucado's, the HCSB, and the NKJV Study Bible.
Nice collection.
Thank you, Brother Tim 🌹⭐🌹⭐ I ALWAYS learn something new from you,Teacher 🤔😵💫🤔
Thanks! I try to bring good information to the channel that you don’t normally get.
@@anickelsworthbiblereviews Longtime Subbie and FanGirl of THE THREE TIMS. Blessings to you and yours.🌹🌹🌹🌹
Great video, awesome Bibles
Great info I did not know - TY Tim 📕
I have a Thompson Chain Reference NIV, Second printing, printed in the US in 1985 by Zondervan and Kirkbride. The copyright on the NiV text was 1978 by the New York Bible Society. The copyright on the Thompson Chain itself was by Kidkbride in 1983. This is a hardcover edition which, because I have a vinyl zippered cover (brown with a tan dove), is still in good shape. Actually every one of my study bibles that I use regularly have held up pretty well, even though each was my primary Bible for years, carried to church, to Bible studies, to prayer meetings and on vacations to the beach, and on mission trips. That are not premium bibles, but are mostly bonded leather. But instead of spending on premium leather, I spent about $10, or less, on a wordkeeper canvas cover. These include the first edition NIV from around 1985, the tenth anniversary edition in 1997, a 2006 edition NLT. In 2021 I purchased the 2011 NIV Deluxe reference with Topical Links in brown LeatherSoft and it to has a canvas cover. My newest study Bible, the Hardcover Spirit-filled life Bible, third edition doesn’t leave the house so I haven’t covered it.
I have the NRSV Life Application Study Bible from 1989, and the Archeological Study Bible from 2010 in the KJV translation. Both OOP.
Thanks for being my favorite Bible reviewer
I appreciate that!
Congratulations Pastor Tim! I have several of theses too. Thanks for explaining how to find the edition and year! I have a question- Is the Spirit filled life Bible still considered a Pentecostal Bible? I noticed that the scholars, theologians, pastors etc are different from my first edition to my third edition. Thanks!!👍👍
Cool tip! Thanks!
Informative vid, cheers for letting us know study notes trickle down to subsequent editions. I recently got giant print NLT filament but numbers on front run;
29 28 27 26 25 24 23
8 7 6 5 4 3
Printed in China, ( liked that video you did on pros and cons on buying bibles printed there very fair)
Cheers from 🇬🇧
Looks like it’s a 3rd edition printed in 2023.
The Lucado Encouraging Word Bible by Thomas Nelson is basically the newest version of The Inspirational Study Bible!
Interesting. Didn’t know there was a newer edition. Crazy how many bibles there are out there.
@anickelsworthbiblereviews I think it's the second revamp. I can't find my original- hope it's here somewhere.
Tim, I don't open any book without going to the copyright page. It should be a part of any reading that you do, it is important. Maybe a little more in the realm of fiction, but still important in other genres. That page actually has a name, I had forgotten it and had to look it up but it is called a colophon.
The only thing about older study Bibles is that they do not include newer archaeology and manuscript discoveries. I only keep one hardcopy of each translation I have and donate the extra stuff. My NIV is a Life Application Study Bible from 1991 in almost perfect condition.
I believe the colophon would be what is often called the title page. This is the copyright page.
@@anickelsworthbiblereviews You are right! But I never open a book without reading the copyright page for the original publication date and the briefest of info about the writer.
Great info! One correction: that info is not on the title page (always a right-hand page), but the copyright/verso page (or colophon in some accounts, though the colophon can also be one of the last pages in a book). And the copyright page is usually on the back of the title page, and so is a left-hand page as in all the examples you show.
Correct. It was such a misspeak and I had to go back and listen to assure you were accurate in your accusation.🤣🤣🤣
@@anickelsworthbiblereviews And in your defense, the copyright info *IS* almost always on the *BACK* of the Title page, so if could be argued that you were essentially correct anyway. (PS - I've been trying to learn more about the parts of a book and its contents, so that's why I noticed!)
The old HCSB Study Bible was a favorite of mine (although, as I recall, the paper was pretty poor).
It’s not terrible.
Pastor, can you please explain why the Fire Bible Global Edition is SO expensive?! I can't find one online for less than $100...used!
@@djlclopez128 generally it’s because of scarcity.
Greetings from Australia
I have watched your reviews on study bibles.
May I ask you a question?
I have two study bibles, The Charles Swindoll NLT large print study bible and the KJV foundation study bible in large print.
I bought the latter by mistake and could not return. There are differences, but are there any advantages in keeping two bibles, or should I donate the KJV to a church.
There’s always an advantage to having two different perspectives. The KJV Foundations is a condensed version of the NKJV study bible. It focuses on the foundational elements of the faith.
:)
Bro, John Hagee is a heretic.
@@ThePaulKM I said the Bible contained his bias. I’m not planning to get into an argument about him or his beliefs. The H word is a serious allegation.
@@anickelsworthbiblereviews I am at least encouraged that you are not recommending him.
And yes, 'The H word' is a serious allegation, one of which John Hagee supremely deserves.