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Lexham Methods Series (4 vols.)

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Lexham Methods Series

Understand the Bible better than ever before. The Lexham Methods Series is designed for exegetes who need to learn, refresh, and master the tools of biblical scholarship. The books present scholarly information in an easy-to-understand format and focus on cutting-edge methods for biblical interpretation while avoiding jargon. The four volumes give you a complete overview of every major type of biblical interpretation, featuring history and key figures, methods and terms, and a how-to section, giving you a strong foundation for further research.

Key Features

Lexham Methods Series:

  • Easily reference details about methods of biblical interpretation—Each book is a quick reference for an overview of a type of biblical interpretation, the major elements and terminology of that type of criticism, and examples of using the affiliated methods.
  • Teaches biblical interpretation methods—This educational resource leads you through self-study, including a how-to section with numerous examples. Whether you need a refresher or have never learned biblical interpretation methods, this resource will guide you through what you need to know.
  • Share what you’ve learned—The professionally designed slides present key terms, allowing pastors, academics, and teachers to present the major ideas in a memorable way.
  • Introduces new research and resources—You may encounter new insights and content in these volumes.
  • Curates your library—The links to your Logos library allow you to take your learning to a deeper level. You will agree with some aspects of the content, disagree with others, but you will encounter all of it in biblical studies. This resource guides you through the major elements of biblical studies.
  • Broadens and deepens your biblical education—Each volume clearly and accessibly presents the key figures and moments in the historical development of each type of biblical interpretation, the steps involved in executing the methods affiliated, and concrete examples of how to practice the methods.

Praise for the Lexham Methods Series

Students entering biblical studies courses at the college or seminary level are often baffled by the array of new methodologies they encounter. Reading their Bible and going to church never prepared them for the likes of form criticism, redaction criticism, rhetorical analysis, narrative criticism, or structuralism! What these students need is a simple and clear introduction to the presuppositions, technical terms and goals of these methods. The Lexham Method Series meets this need. Highly recommended. I only wish these volumes were available when I was in seminary!

—Mark L. Strauss, professor of New Testament, Bethel Seminary San Diego

Product Details

  • Title: Lexham Methods Series
  • Editors: Douglas Mangum, Josh Westbury, Amy Balogh, and Douglas Estes
  • Publisher: Lexham Press
  • Volumes: 4
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About the Editors

Douglas Mangum is an academic editor for Lexham Press. He holds a PhD in Hebrew from the University of Free State and holds a Master of Arts in Hebrew and Semitic Studies from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He is an associate editor of the Lexham Bible Dictionary, editor of the Lexham Methods Series, and a regular Bible Study Magazine contributor.

Josh Westbury holds a PhD in Biblical Languages from the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa. He also holds an MA in Biblical Languages from the University of Stellenbosch, a Master of Divinity degree from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary with a focus on exegesis and Biblical Languages, and a BA in Theology and Biblical Languages from Houston Baptist University. Josh currently serves as a Scholar-in-Residence at Faithlife.

Amy L. Balogh is Lead Lecturer of Religious Studies at the Regis University College of Contemporary Liberal Studies. She holds a PhD from the University of Denver and Iliff School of Theology and an MA in Bible and Ancient Semitic Languages from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. She has served as co-editor for Social & Historical Approaches to the Bible, a contributing editor for DIY Bible Study, and a contributor to Lexham Bible Dictionary and Faithlife Study Bible.

Douglas Estes holds a PhD in Theology from the University of Nottingham. He is Assistant Professor of New Testament and Practical Theology and the Director of the DMin Program at South University—Columbia. Previously he served in pastoral ministry for sixteen years. He is a regular contributor to Bible Study Magazine.

Sample Pages from Textual Criticism of the Bible

Reviews

5 ratings

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  1. Andy Devine

    Andy Devine

    1/2/2018

  2. Faithlife User
  3. Daniel Clewley
    This is very interesting to me. Just to see how it all came together...how God took care of His Word, by putting it in just the right hands, is truly amazing to me. I can't wait to delve into this material.
  4. Scott

    Scott

    12/7/2016

    Grateful for getting such a wonderful resource at this incredible price.
  5. Eric Fary

    Eric Fary

    8/13/2016

    Excited to get! Will help with addressing some issues on Textual Criticism in my studies, and see how Lexham goes about their processes. Agree or disagree, helpful.
  6. Wim Evers

    Wim Evers

    8/6/2016

    Looks very good, thorough and yet easy accessible. And for a very fair price. Can't wait to get it.
  7. Jeffrey A Snyder
    have volume 1 so is there a discount for that?
  8. Randy Butler

    Randy Butler

    5/2/2015

    Check out the bidding chart... Push this through at $50!
  9. Ross Purdy

    Ross Purdy

    7/13/2014

    "Alexandrian Text Type" "Includes the earliest and best texts...." Seems to me that the scholarship has not moved much beyond the debunked Westcott and Hort theories of the 1800's. Why isn't the contradictory and confused nature of the Alexandrian Text type pointed out and why does the history not include the important work of Scrivener, Burgon, Sturz, Hodges, Farstad, Pickering, Robinson, and Pierpont? This "guide" seems to promote the incredibly biased critical texts of Nestle, Aland, and the UBS and the nonsensical contradictory canons of NT textual criticism based on eclectic notions. The result of this kind of TC is a text that moves further away from the historical text actually used by the Church and creates a text that was never used by the Church. How can such a "guide" possibly be useful?
  10. Andy Anderson

    Andy Anderson

    7/11/2014

    15.00 per volume is a quarter of the price, and very affordable for this type of content. Thanks Logos for making this an incredible value.

$89.99

Collection value: $99.96
Save $9.97 (9%)