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Commentaries
Matthew Henry Concise
This is an exhaustive study tool used by scholars and laymen alike when studying the Bible. This commentary covers every chapter in the Bible, providing thorough commentary on the Scriptures.
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Matthew Henry Complete
This resource goes into greater detail than the concise version linked above.
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Geneva Study Bible
The Geneva Bible was the first complete Bible to be translated into English from the original Hebrew and Greek texts. In part due to the extensive marginal notes, it was the most widely read and influential English Bible of the 16th and 17th centuries. The King James Bible, Authorized Version of 1611, gradually replaced it.
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Darby's Synopsis
The John Darby Synopsis of the Bible does not attempt a commentary on every verse. Instead, Darby comments on each chapter as a whole along with a commentary on the subject matter contained within a given chapter.
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Jamieson, Fausset, & Brown
Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset, and David Brown wrote this commentary and explanatory on the whole Bible in 1871.
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McGarvey and Pendleton's Fourfold Gospel Commentary
The Fourfold Gospel Commentary was written by J. W. McGarvey and Philip Y. Pendleton and published in book form in 1914.
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Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible
John Gill presents a verse-by-verse exposition of the entire Bible. He preached in the same church as C. H. Spurgeon. Much of his information is found nowhere else outside of the ancient Jewish writings.
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John Wesley's Notes on the Bible
John Wesley's Old Testament notes were first printed between 1765-1766, and the first combination of both OT & NT notes first came out in 1987 under the name Notes On the Bible. He made an intentional attempt "to make the notes as short as possible" to assist the unlearned reader.
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Luther's Commentary on Galatians and Introduction to Romans
The title says it all. These are Martin Luther's comments on Galatians and his introduction to the book of Romans.
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