How can biblical exegesis be fruitful and meaningful when commentaries and lexicons provide contradictory interpretations, seeming to support opposing translations? Romans 9–16 asks important exegetical and interpretive questions phrase by phrase, summarizing and organizing content from every major Bible commentary and dozens of lexicons. You can instantly identify exegetical challenges, discover a text’s interpretive history, and survey the scope of everything written about each verse and phrase.
Take your exegesis to the next level with the Logos edition of Romans 9–16! All commentary and lexicon references link to your digital titles, and Scripture references link to your Greek and Hebrew texts and your English translations. With the Exegetical Summaries Series and the power of your Logos digital library, you have the tools you need for exegesis and interpretation, research projects, sermon preparation, and Bible study.
“‘one regards one day as more important than another” (Page 275)
“The present imperative indicates a continual or ongoing action of transformation [SSA].” (Page 197)
“goes on living so that the sacrifice continues in its efficacy until the person who offered dies” (Page 195)
“There was a wider group of apostles beyond the twelve, and these two people were in that group” (Page 370)
“How are the three modifiers ‘living’, ‘holy’, and ‘well-pleasing’ used in this sentence?” (Page 195)