Loading Loading
  SEARCH
Home Products Training Support About Checkout

John Darby's Synopsis of the Books of the Bible (5 volumes)

 
  Suggested
Retail Price
Logos
Sale Price
Pre-Pub
Special
 
DOWNLOAD $129.99 $109.99 $79.99
CD-ROM $129.99 $109.99 $79.99
 
 
 
John Darby's Synopsis of the Books of the Bible (5 volumes)
Status: Under Development 
   
 

How do we interpret biblical prophecy? What are the implications of the rapture? What is the relationship between the church on earth and God’s future kingdom? John Darby began to seriously consider these questions during the nineteenth century, and his answers gave rise to fundamentalism in America and profoundly influenced preachers such as Dwight Moody and authors such as Tim LaHaye.

Logos is pleased to offer the 5-volume Synopsis of the Books of the Bible, which includes Darby’s chapter-by-chapter commentary on the entire Bible. These volumes contain introductions—written by Darby himself—to each book of the Bible, along with overviews of important biblical themes, such as prophecy, revelation, and the Gospel. His interpretation of Scripture in the Synopsis of the Books of the Bible reflects and informs his dispensationalist teachings—teachings which later gave rise to fundamentalism and transformed the landscape of twentieth century Christianity.

With the Libronix Digital Library System, John Darby’s Synopsis of the Books of the Bible is fully compatible with your favorite Bible translations, Bible dictionaries, encyclopedias, and the rest of the commentaries in your library. This makes the Logos edition an indispensible tool for understanding the connection between Darby’s biblical interpretation and the development of dispensationalist thought.

...I literally devoured these five volumes, giving almost every spare moment to them, so that I read them in two weeks' time, and I think I am safe in saying that they opened up the Scripture in their comprehensiveness in a way that nothing else has ever touched.
—H.A. Ironside
Darby left a lasting legacy for us today.
Conservative Theological Journal
To see classical dispensationalist theology at its best, one must read Darby…
Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society
Darby was a brilliant man…
Moody Handbook of Theology

Key Features Included

  • Introductions and overviews to important biblical themes
  • Chapter-by-chapter analysis of the entire Bible

Electronic Titles Included

Genesis to 2 Chronicles

  • 628 pages

Sample pages: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5

In this volume, Darby introduces important themes of creation, sin, and the relationship between good and evil in the lives of key figures found in the first half of the Old Testament. He connects creation to God’s law and human responsibility—in these books, says Darby, we find God’s principles for maintaining relationships with individuals. In this way, God’s kingdom in the Old Testament not only resembles the Church in the present, but also God’s intentions for the future. Darby also explains the first two dispensations of the relationship between humanity and God without the law, and humanity’s relationship to God with the law. Darby’s commentary exhibits key tenets of dispensationalist thought, and lays the groundwork for interpreting the rest of the Bible.

Ezra to Malachi

  • 637 pages

Sample pages: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5

The second volume continues Darby’s synopsis of the Old Testament, beginning with Ezra. In this volume, Darby includes an interpretation of the Psalms which connects the words of David to Christ’s suffering and death. This volume also contains introductions to the prophets and to the nature of prophecy in general. Some prophecy, he says, is meant to warn Israel, while other prophecy promises future glory. Darby’s impact on the role of prophecy, the process of prophetic interpretation, and the reading of apocalyptic literature in the modern church has been felt ever since.

Matthew to John

  • 580 pages

Sample pages: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5

How does the Old Testament differ from the New Testament? Does one carry more weight than the other? The third volume of Synopsis of the Books of the Bible includes introductions to the Gospels and overviews of the New Testament in which Darby answers these very questions. In the Old Testament, he says, God has spoken. But in the New Testament, God manifests himself on earth. Most notably, however, Darby asserts that the Holy Spirit makes God clearer through the events of the world, beginning with the life and death of Christ, and continuing into God’s renewed relationship with Israel and the coming events of the rapture and Christ’s second return.

Acts to Philippians

  • 531 pages

Sample pages: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5

Darby’s synopsis on the middle books of the New Testament is devoted to the Holy Spirit, the events at Pentecost, and the work of the Spirit through apostolic authority. He also provides an introduction to the Epistles as a literary genre, noting that they connect the life of God with life on earth. His synopsis on Romans is especially thorough, because, he says, it aptly describes Christ’s presence on earth and the life of the Church.

Colossians to Revelation

  • 648 pages

Sample pages: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5

Darby concludes his synopsis on the New Testament with lengthy commentary on the remainder of Paul’s epistles, the Pastoral Epistles, and the apocalyptic literature found in Revelation. He connects the future of God’s work to events in history by interpreting the symbolism in Revelation. His literal reading of apocalyptic literature prefigured fundamentalist biblical interpretation for the two centuries that followed.

Additional Information

  • Title: Synopsis of the Books of the Bible
  • 5 volumes
  • 3024 pages
  • Loizeaux Brothers, Inc., 1950

About the Author

Born in London in 1801, John Darby attended Westminster School and Trinity College, where he graduated in 1819. Darby became a lawyer, but practiced law for only one year, since he felt the nature of his profession was incompatible with his religious beliefs. He was ordained as a deacon in the Church of England in 1825, and became a priest in 1826.

As a priest, Darby became quickly disenchanted by what he perceived as the empty ritual and corrupt bureaucracy prevalent in the Church of England. He resisted the necessity of clergy, asserting that their role contradicted New Testament teaching, and claimed that the presence of clergy implicitly denied that the Holy Spirit speaks to laypersons. He gathered with other like-minded dissidents to form the movement which later became known as the Plymouth Brethren, and he formally left the Church of England in 1832.

A New Perspective

Darby’s ecclesiological pessimism gave way to a new perspective on Scripture, which later became known as dispensationalism. In Darby’s view, the scope of history is divided into seven separate dispensations, each comprising a new stage of God’s revelation. Darby advanced the following dispensationalist scheme:

  1. Eden to the Flood
  2. Noah
  3. Abraham
  4. Israel
    • Under the law
    • Under the priesthood
    • Under the kings
  5. Gentiles
  6. The Spirit
  7. The Millennium

Since the church finds itself in the sixth dispensation, Darby used a literal interpretation of apocalyptic literature to predict the events of the seventh dispensation. In doing so, he systematized the notion of the secret rapture and developed an extensive pre-millennial eschatology, in which historical events can be used to predict the advent of the Millennium—the seventh dispensation.

Impact and Legacy

Later in his lifetime, Darby traveled extensively. He delivered a series of lectures in Lausanne, Switzerland in 1837, and made seven visits to the United States and Canada, where he influenced individuals such as Dwight Moody and A.J. Gordon and initiated the Bible conference movement. Darby’s influence is also found in the writings of C.I. Scofield, Charles Henry Mackintosh, and William E. Blackstone, whose writings contributed to the rise of fundamentalism in America during the early twentieth century. More recently, Darby’s impact can be felt in books by Hal Lindsay, Tim LaHaye, and Jerry Jenkins.

Benefits of the Logos Bible Software Edition

As the leading digital publisher of biblical resources, Logos Bible Software is the best choice for building a digital library that is comprehensive, yet affordable; powerful, yet easy to use. Whether you are a new Christian, seasoned pastor, or advanced scholar, Logos has thousands of high quality digital resources perfectly suited to meet your needs. All of our products can be used by themselves, but are greatly enhanced when added to one of our base packages. The Libronix Digital Library System dramatically enhances the value of any resource by enabling you to find what you are looking for with lightning speed and incredible precision. Your investment is safe when you choose Libronix. Your books and licenses are backed up on our server and are easily restorable, and your resources are updateable to be compatible with future versions of Libronix.

Related Titles:

Home Products Training Support About Us Search