How can the task of biblical exegesis be fruitful and meaningful when commentaries and lexicons provide contradictory interpretations and seem to support opposing translations? The Exegetical Summaries Series asks important exegetical and interpretive questions—phrase-by-phrase—and summarizes and organizes the 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 An Exegetical Summary of 1 Corinthians 1–9.
“It is not that the Corinthians did not have the Spirit, but that they were thinking and living as though they did not” (Page 107)
“‘In Christ Jesus’ is the predicate of ‘you are’: God is the source of their position in Christ” (Page 69)
“They are compared to various kinds of teaching or wisdom [” (Page 128)
“This is a legal term indicating acquittal from guilt by God” (Page 71)
“Fornication is a sin against the body because ‘the body is for the Lord’. Fornication destroys this relationship” (Page 245)
This series offers endless exegetical assistance…summarizing the major exegetical issues in interpretation… [It includes] comprehensive analysis of the raw data of the text.
—Online reviewer