David E. Garland
Author of The Expositor's Bible Commentary: Ephesians through Philemon
About the Author
David E. Garland is professor of Christian Scriptures at George W. Truett Theological Seminary, Baylor University. His hooks include A Theology of Mark's Gospel and commentaries on Matthew, Mark, Luke, 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, Colossians, Philemon and Philippians.
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Works by David E. Garland
The Expositor's Bible Commentary: Genesis-Leviticus (Expositor's Bible Commentary) (2008) — Editor — 217 copies, 2 reviews
Reading Matthew: A Literary and Theological Commentary on the First Gospel (Reading the New Testament Series) (1993) 163 copies
A Theology of Mark's Gospel: Good News about Jesus the Messiah, the Son of God (Biblical Theology of the New Testament Series) (2015) 161 copies
Flawed Families of the Bible: How God's Grace Works through Imperfect Relationships (2007) 86 copies, 1 review
One Hundred Years of Study on the Passion Narratives (N a B P R Bibliographic Series) (1990) 8 copies
Philippians 1 copy
Associated Works
Dictionary for Theological Interpretation of the Bible (2005) — Contributor, some editions — 598 copies, 5 reviews
Theological Interpretation of the New Testament: A Book-by-Book Survey (2008) — Contributor — 267 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- 大衛.加蘭
- Birthdate
- 1947-09-24
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (MDiv ∙ 1973 ∙ PhD ∙ 1976)
University of Tübingen
Macquarie University - Occupations
- Professor of Christian Scriptures
New Testament scholar - Organizations
- Association of Baptist Professors of Religion
Society of Biblical Literature
Baylor University - Relationships
- Garland, Diana R. (wife)
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Crisfield, Maryland, USA
- Places of residence
- Louisville, Kentucky, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Fantastic resource. There are many parts of the Gospels that I never quite understood. In this, there are many moments where you read "ah ha!" and know that Garland presents a better, more complete understanding. The best parts are the temple discussions - the fig tree, the moneychangers, and render unto Caesar.
Garland uses the Original, Bridging, and current contexts effectively. I tend to read the Bible as a series of vignettes. I think many others do, too. This book helps to understand show more Mark as a cohesive unit itself, within the NT, the OT, and its time. He is highly effective at providing context. A brief rundown of quotations shows he quotes every book of the Bible except Obadiah and 2 John.
Additionally the author is well-read. The works he quotes are more than I've read over the last few years. Not only did Garland read them, but processed them well enough to apply.
This isn't a commentary where we get a verse followed by a sentence or paragraph, then another verse. Whole chunks are studied together. There's about a 1/2 chapter followed by @ 10 pages of commentary.
Finally, he presents and discusses various views of different commentators on particular verses, contemporary and past. I haven't read those works to know if Garland is presenting straw-man arguments, but I'm familiar with the general theologies to know the layout of the discussion.
This work is well-edited, a labor of love and a joy to read. This is not a page turner, but something you have to chew on. That's not a bad thing!! I generally read a section a day. I will turn back to it in the future as a reference.
I originally received this book as a free promo on Olive Tree software. I don't remember if it was pushed out, included, advertised, or what. I hadn't heard of this series so it doesn't seem like something I'd seek out with the crush of commentaries available. One night on vacation, my daughter asked why Jesus cursed the fig tree. I fumbled through the Olive Tree software (not a fan of the UI) and somehow this commentary popped up. It was the 1st explanation that ever just made sense. I was so impressed I bought the book ASAP. I'll definitely pick up other volumes of this series. Yay for providential promos! show less
Garland uses the Original, Bridging, and current contexts effectively. I tend to read the Bible as a series of vignettes. I think many others do, too. This book helps to understand show more Mark as a cohesive unit itself, within the NT, the OT, and its time. He is highly effective at providing context. A brief rundown of quotations shows he quotes every book of the Bible except Obadiah and 2 John.
Additionally the author is well-read. The works he quotes are more than I've read over the last few years. Not only did Garland read them, but processed them well enough to apply.
This isn't a commentary where we get a verse followed by a sentence or paragraph, then another verse. Whole chunks are studied together. There's about a 1/2 chapter followed by @ 10 pages of commentary.
Finally, he presents and discusses various views of different commentators on particular verses, contemporary and past. I haven't read those works to know if Garland is presenting straw-man arguments, but I'm familiar with the general theologies to know the layout of the discussion.
This work is well-edited, a labor of love and a joy to read. This is not a page turner, but something you have to chew on. That's not a bad thing!! I generally read a section a day. I will turn back to it in the future as a reference.
I originally received this book as a free promo on Olive Tree software. I don't remember if it was pushed out, included, advertised, or what. I hadn't heard of this series so it doesn't seem like something I'd seek out with the crush of commentaries available. One night on vacation, my daughter asked why Jesus cursed the fig tree. I fumbled through the Olive Tree software (not a fan of the UI) and somehow this commentary popped up. It was the 1st explanation that ever just made sense. I was so impressed I bought the book ASAP. I'll definitely pick up other volumes of this series. Yay for providential promos! show less
This is an excellent commentary on First Corinthians -- both well-researched and well-written. I just completed teaching a six month course on the epistle, and although I started teaching the course using about 10 commentaries, by the time the course ended this book had become my primary resource. I recommend it very highly.
Flawed Families of the Bible: How Gods Grace Works through Imperfect Relationships by David E. Garland
NCLA Review -An eye-opening look at family relationships that are found in the Bible and how they relate to the same problems found in present day families. With their thought-provoking interpretations of familiar Biblical characters and stories, the authors challenge the reader to take a fresh look at the actions of Bathsheba, Jacob, David, Abraham, Leah and others. God worked his grace through these flawed individuals and their less-than-perfect families as he continues to do in present show more day relationships. This book is not only thought-provoking but will lead to lively discussions and hopefully to more openness and compassion within church communities for flawed individuals and families. Rating: 4—AL show less
THE NEW AMERICAN COMMENTARY is for the minister or Bible student who wants to understand and expound the Scriptures. Notable features include:* commentary based on THE NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION;* the NIV text printed in the body of the commentary;* sound scholarly methodology that reflects capable research in the original languages;* interpretation that emphasizes the theological unity of each book and of Scripture as a whole;* readable and applicable exposition.
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