JPS Torah Commentary, 5 Volume Set Each volume also contains supplementary essays that elaborate upon key words and themes, a glossary of commentators and sources, extensive bibliographic notes, and. Utilizing the latest research to enhance our understanding of the biblical
TITLE | : | JPS Torah Commentary, 5 Volume Set |
AUTHOR | : | |
RATING | : | 4.59 (371 Votes) |
ASIN | : | 0827603312 |
FORMAT TYPE | : | Hardcover |
NUMBER of PAGES | : | 548 Pages |
PUBLISH DATE | : | 1996-05-01 |
GENRE | : |
Written by four outstanding Torah scholars, the JPS Torah Commentary Series represents a fusion of the best of the old and new. Utilizing the latest research to enhance our understanding of the biblical text, it takes its place as one of the most authoritative yet accessible Bible commentaries of our day. This JPS Torah Commentary series guides readers through the words and ideas of the Torah. Each volume is the work of a scholar who stands at the pinnacle of his field. Every page contains the complete traditional Hebrew text, with cantillation notes, the JPS translation of the Holy Scriptures, aliyot breaks, Masoretic notes, and commentary by a distinguished Hebrew Bible scholar, integrating classical and modern sources. Each volume also contains supplementary essays that elaborate upon key words and themes, a glossary of commentators and sources, extensive bibliographic notes, and
EDITORIAL :
Language Notes Text: English, Hebrew (translation) Original Language: Hebrew
REVIEW :
The book does provide many great facts about each bug and insect that it talks about. Ostensibly, the "author" was the ghost writer of another book entitled "The Loneliest Man in the World," and decided to write a booklet about the writing of that book. Each one brought something interesting while building on things hinted at in the others. He dismisses the export protection model of East Asia as inconsistent. RCA would license its radio technology to others resulting in a proliferation of competing brands of radio sets. As an example, try multiplying two two-digit numbers in your head while you are running. My wife "discovered" Hobby Lobby while I was training for my job in Oklahoma City several years ago. The author acknowledges that his approach to human history for that period is reductionist, strongly materialist, mostly universalist, functionalist, and explicitly evolutionist.
No comments:
Post a Comment