Tydale New Testament Commenteries contains The Letter of James and also book 16.
"This study examines the association of 'implanted logos' and the 'perfect law of freedom' in the Letter of James. It argues that James understands the Torah to be a written expression of the divine law the Stoics correlated with human reason. After showing how past interpretation of James's 'logos' has been guided by a problematic essentialist approach to Christian origins, the Stoic theory of…
(Revised and updated edition) A classic tool revised for a new generation of pastors and students of the Bible, A. T. Robertson's Word Pictures in the New Testament identifies connotations and pictorial nuances often lost in the translation of New Testament words. This widely referenced, classic tool features a new page header system, true Greek, updated translations, Americanized spellings, im…
Translation in modern English with commentary.
In this carefully crafted commentary, Peter O'Brien distinctively harvests the results of recent scholarship on the letter to the Hebrews, especially in relation to the genre of the document and the flow of its discourse. O'Brien views this letter as a "word of exhortation"--A homily or sermon that skillfully interweaves exposition and exhortation, encouraging faithful perseverance in the light…
The aim of this series is to exegete each passage of Scripture succinctly in its grammatical and historical context. Each passage is interpreted in the light of its biblical setting, with a view to grammatical detail, literary context, flow of biblical argument, and historical setting.
The aim of this series is to exegete each passage of Scripture succinctly in its grammatical and historical context. Each passage is interpreted in the light of its biblical setting, with a view to grammatical detail, literary context, flow of biblical argument, and historical setting.