Baker Publishing Group
Author of God's Word: Today's Bible Translation That Says What It Means (God's Word Series)
About the Author
Series
Works by Baker Publishing Group
God's Word: Today's Bible Translation That Says What It Means (God's Word Series) (1995) 319 copies, 1 review
The Focus on the Family® Guide to Talking with Your Kids about Sex: Honest Answers for Every Age (2013) 52 copies
The Heart of a Father: True Stories of Inspiration and Encouragement (Stories from the Heart) (2002) 47 copies
Moments of Peace in the Presence of God: Morning and Evening Meditations for Every Day of the Year (2004) 37 copies
Walk Thru the Book of Jonah, A: Experiencing God's Relentless Grace (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2009) 33 copies
Daily Light on the Daily Path: Morning and Evening Devotionals from God's Word® (Gods Word Translation) (2010) 30 copies
365 Moments of Peace for a Woman's Heart: Reflections on God's Gifts of Love, Hope, and Comfort (2014) 24 copies, 1 review
Walk Thru the Book of Ephesians, A: Real Power for Daily Life (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2009) 20 copies
Book of Common Prayer, Enlarged Edition, Black French Morocco Leather, CP423 (2006) 17 copies, 1 review
New Cambridge Paragraph Bible with Apocrypha, Black Calfskin Leather, KJ595:TA Black Calfskin: Personal Size (2011) 15 copies
Walk Thru the Book of Ruth, A: Loyalty and Love (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2009) 14 copies
Walk Thru the Life of Joseph, A: The Power of Forgiveness (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2009) 14 copies
New Testament with Psalms and Proverbs (NRSV: New Revised Standard Version) (1992) 12 copies, 1 review
Walk Thru the Life of Peter, A: Growing Bold Faith (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2009) 12 copies
Walk Thru the Life of Solomon, A: Pursuing a Heart of Integrity (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2009) 12 copies
Walk Thru the Book of Philippians, A: Experience the Joy of the Lord (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2010) 11 copies
Walk Thru the Life of Abraham, A: Faith in God's Promises (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2010) 11 copies
Walk Thru Love, A: Loving God, Loving Others (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2010) 10 copies
Walk Thru the Life of Elijah, A: Standing Strong for Truth (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2010) 10 copies
Walk Thru the Book of Esther, A: Courage in the Face of Crisis (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2010) 10 copies
Walk Thru the Book of James, A: Faith that Endures (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2009) 9 copies
Walk Thru the Book of Luke, A: A Savior for the World (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2010) 9 copies
Walk Thru the Book of Acts, A: Faith That Changes the World (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides) (2010) 8 copies
America's Great Revivals: The Story of Spiritual Revival in the United States, 1734-2000 (2020) 5 copies
The Kitchen Devotional: Readings and Recipes to Feed Your Soul, Nourish Your Faith, and Bring Joy to the Table (2024) 2 copies
Words to Live By 1 copy
A Walk Thru the Book of Ephesians (Walk Thru the Bible Discussion Guides): Real Power for Daily Life (2009) 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
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Reviews
First sentence: In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness covered the surface of the watery depths, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the surface of the waters. Then God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light.
Start date: August 27, 2024
End date for Old Testament: September 23, 2024
End date for New Testament: October 12, 2024
This was the FIRST time I've ever checked out a Bible from the library in order to read show more and review it. To be fair, it was more with reviewing in mind than reading. I checked out the digital e-book from the library.
Things you should absolutely know about the CSB Baker Illustrated Study Bible:
It was first published in 2019. It is now out of print. Since a popular Bible reviewer on YouTube made a video about it in December 2023, it went from a fairly unknown, slightly difficult to find study Bible to incredibly impossible to find unless you want to over-pay by several hundred dollars. Copies are being listed for about $350 to $450. The digital e-book is of course still available to buy...for under $20.
There will definitely be differences in layout between the digital and print. This is impossible to avoid. I reviewed the digital copy, of course.
It is single column. It is red letter. It does feature study notes and book introductions.
It uses the Christian Standard Bible.
Observations and thoughts (my own):
Long story short: do I personally think it is worth hundreds of dollars????? NO, NO, NO, NO. I think it would have been worth the original selling price.
I do think it is PACKED with information, with "bells and whistles." At least in the digital edition, it seemed the study notes had study notes. Links to definitions from a dictionary and links to longer articles. The study note section of the digital book was packed with "illustrative" "goodies." Illustrations, charts, photographs, tables, etc. Was every illustration helpful or necessary? No. Some were extremely very helpful. Others were pure clutter. (Unless you are into that kind of thing.)
It had longer articles. It starts out strong with "The Grand Story of the Bible," and "How To Read, Interpret, and Apply the Bible." It has introductions to the Old Testament and New Testament. It had introductions before each new section/genre. (Pentateuch, Historical, Poetic, Prophetic, Gospel and Acts, Letters and Revelation. Of course, each book of the bible has its own introduction.
It had shorter articles. These "mini" "many" articles are several paragraphs in length apiece and address themes, subjects, topics, issues from within books of the Bible. These are the ones I mentioned being study notes to the study notes. I'd be curious how these are arranged and laid out in the print edition. (Are they in the back of the Bible???? Are they in the text of the Bible???? Who knows.)
It had definitions, oh so many definitions. These help clarify--at least--how the men (and perhaps women) who worked on the Bible feel about certain subjects, topics, etc.
Each chapter has study notes. What I will say--for better or worse--is that each book seems to have its own way about it. That's a horrible description. What I mean is that the tone, the style, differs greatly book by book. For example, you might have book of the Bible "X" have study notes that are extremely intellectual, scholarly, filled with LONG multi-syllable words, convey complex ideas, a bit intimidating. You might have book of the Bible "Y" be super laidback, casual, all summarizing, strong doses of speculation, no true insights or information to learn.
What bothered me was the strong SPECULATION in places. I found this mostly to be true in Genesis through 2 Kings. It was like there was an enormous shift between the first half and second half of the Old Testament in terms of how the study notes were done. One place of speculation was that David never specified Solomon was to be heir to the throne and that Bathsheba was manipulating behind the scenes to get the job done. Bathsheba wanted HER son on the throne and David was weak and dying so she was able to wink, wink, wink hey remember when you promised Solomon the throne. The note writer claims that if David had such thoughts on who should be the royal heir, it would have been mentioned in 2 Samuel directly. That is just one example.
Speculating happens. Granted. It's just you don't need outside help with that. Every reader can read the biblical text and ask speculative questions because they are curious. It doesn't mean they should brainstorm an answer up out of thin air and include it in a study Bible.
As I mentioned the study notes seem to stop summarizing and speculating after the history books. It then went to a more scholarly, information-filled approach.
Now ALL study notes have a varying degree of theological-denominational bias. And sometimes the study notes from one book of the Bible seems to be at odds with the study notes from another book of the Bible. The study notes seem to offer a bit of contradiction--in places where there is no contradiction in Scripture. (And by bias, I mean taking "a" position about something.)
The Ephesians notes reveal, for example, that the writer of those study notes (at the very least) are NOT in any way shape or form REFORMED. (Though other places that talk about predestination and election and foreknowledge seem to have varying degrees of interpretation/meaning. So perhaps not every one who worked on the Bible feels exactly the same on this subject.)
The speculation weirded me out in several places. The un-Reformed position left me wanting--personally. Of course, there will be a large population that will rejoice in its un-reformed-ness. show less
Start date: August 27, 2024
End date for Old Testament: September 23, 2024
End date for New Testament: October 12, 2024
This was the FIRST time I've ever checked out a Bible from the library in order to read show more and review it. To be fair, it was more with reviewing in mind than reading. I checked out the digital e-book from the library.
Things you should absolutely know about the CSB Baker Illustrated Study Bible:
It was first published in 2019. It is now out of print. Since a popular Bible reviewer on YouTube made a video about it in December 2023, it went from a fairly unknown, slightly difficult to find study Bible to incredibly impossible to find unless you want to over-pay by several hundred dollars. Copies are being listed for about $350 to $450. The digital e-book is of course still available to buy...for under $20.
There will definitely be differences in layout between the digital and print. This is impossible to avoid. I reviewed the digital copy, of course.
It is single column. It is red letter. It does feature study notes and book introductions.
It uses the Christian Standard Bible.
Observations and thoughts (my own):
Long story short: do I personally think it is worth hundreds of dollars????? NO, NO, NO, NO. I think it would have been worth the original selling price.
I do think it is PACKED with information, with "bells and whistles." At least in the digital edition, it seemed the study notes had study notes. Links to definitions from a dictionary and links to longer articles. The study note section of the digital book was packed with "illustrative" "goodies." Illustrations, charts, photographs, tables, etc. Was every illustration helpful or necessary? No. Some were extremely very helpful. Others were pure clutter. (Unless you are into that kind of thing.)
It had longer articles. It starts out strong with "The Grand Story of the Bible," and "How To Read, Interpret, and Apply the Bible." It has introductions to the Old Testament and New Testament. It had introductions before each new section/genre. (Pentateuch, Historical, Poetic, Prophetic, Gospel and Acts, Letters and Revelation. Of course, each book of the bible has its own introduction.
It had shorter articles. These "mini" "many" articles are several paragraphs in length apiece and address themes, subjects, topics, issues from within books of the Bible. These are the ones I mentioned being study notes to the study notes. I'd be curious how these are arranged and laid out in the print edition. (Are they in the back of the Bible???? Are they in the text of the Bible???? Who knows.)
It had definitions, oh so many definitions. These help clarify--at least--how the men (and perhaps women) who worked on the Bible feel about certain subjects, topics, etc.
Each chapter has study notes. What I will say--for better or worse--is that each book seems to have its own way about it. That's a horrible description. What I mean is that the tone, the style, differs greatly book by book. For example, you might have book of the Bible "X" have study notes that are extremely intellectual, scholarly, filled with LONG multi-syllable words, convey complex ideas, a bit intimidating. You might have book of the Bible "Y" be super laidback, casual, all summarizing, strong doses of speculation, no true insights or information to learn.
What bothered me was the strong SPECULATION in places. I found this mostly to be true in Genesis through 2 Kings. It was like there was an enormous shift between the first half and second half of the Old Testament in terms of how the study notes were done. One place of speculation was that David never specified Solomon was to be heir to the throne and that Bathsheba was manipulating behind the scenes to get the job done. Bathsheba wanted HER son on the throne and David was weak and dying so she was able to wink, wink, wink hey remember when you promised Solomon the throne. The note writer claims that if David had such thoughts on who should be the royal heir, it would have been mentioned in 2 Samuel directly. That is just one example.
Speculating happens. Granted. It's just you don't need outside help with that. Every reader can read the biblical text and ask speculative questions because they are curious. It doesn't mean they should brainstorm an answer up out of thin air and include it in a study Bible.
As I mentioned the study notes seem to stop summarizing and speculating after the history books. It then went to a more scholarly, information-filled approach.
Now ALL study notes have a varying degree of theological-denominational bias. And sometimes the study notes from one book of the Bible seems to be at odds with the study notes from another book of the Bible. The study notes seem to offer a bit of contradiction--in places where there is no contradiction in Scripture. (And by bias, I mean taking "a" position about something.)
The Ephesians notes reveal, for example, that the writer of those study notes (at the very least) are NOT in any way shape or form REFORMED. (Though other places that talk about predestination and election and foreknowledge seem to have varying degrees of interpretation/meaning. So perhaps not every one who worked on the Bible feels exactly the same on this subject.)
The speculation weirded me out in several places. The un-Reformed position left me wanting--personally. Of course, there will be a large population that will rejoice in its un-reformed-ness. show less
365 Moments of Peace for a Woman's Heart: Reflections on God's Gifts of Love, Hope, and Comfort by Baker Publishing Group
365 Moments of Peace for a Woman's Heart: Reflections on God's Gifts of Love, Hope, and Comfort by Baker Publishing Group is a beautiful book, one that feels nice in your hands. Looks and feels so soft, pretty and feminine also having a ribbon for bookmarking.
Filled with a year full of daily devotionals to calm and comfort. They are absolutely beautiful, with scripture, inspirations, and a prayer for each day. No I haven't read the complete book yet but have read a few of the devotionals and show more I love the peaceful filling they leave me with.
Today's could have actually been written for me personally.
The Title is - The Dark Before Daylight
directly underneath is scripture from Psalm 30:5
Then an inspirational that talks about being exhausted, and the situation seeming as dark as the night sky. Goes on to tell you to put your trust in God and rest while he handles the situation.
This is followed by another Bible verse - Psalm 30:11-12
There is also a prayer to the left of the page that reads...
"God, please calm my fears and give me rest. I want to trust you, Lord. Please release me from these worries so I can praise your matchless name. Amen"
This has a special meaning for me, after the very recent passing of a family member. Watching more family members that are suffering with cancer as they fight this battle with that terrible disease. I feel so helpless because there is nothing I can do to make it better for them. But this is a much needed reminder to give these problems to the One (God) who can help.
I love this little book of devotionals and look forward to reading each and every days entry. I highly recommend this book. This would make a great gift for the ladies in your life. The design of the book gives you a peaceful feeling as well as the daily devotionals giving you that peace and comfort.
I received a free copy of this book from Bethany House in exchange for my honest review rather it be good or bad. Thank you. show less
Filled with a year full of daily devotionals to calm and comfort. They are absolutely beautiful, with scripture, inspirations, and a prayer for each day. No I haven't read the complete book yet but have read a few of the devotionals and show more I love the peaceful filling they leave me with.
Today's could have actually been written for me personally.
The Title is - The Dark Before Daylight
directly underneath is scripture from Psalm 30:5
Then an inspirational that talks about being exhausted, and the situation seeming as dark as the night sky. Goes on to tell you to put your trust in God and rest while he handles the situation.
This is followed by another Bible verse - Psalm 30:11-12
There is also a prayer to the left of the page that reads...
"God, please calm my fears and give me rest. I want to trust you, Lord. Please release me from these worries so I can praise your matchless name. Amen"
This has a special meaning for me, after the very recent passing of a family member. Watching more family members that are suffering with cancer as they fight this battle with that terrible disease. I feel so helpless because there is nothing I can do to make it better for them. But this is a much needed reminder to give these problems to the One (God) who can help.
I love this little book of devotionals and look forward to reading each and every days entry. I highly recommend this book. This would make a great gift for the ladies in your life. The design of the book gives you a peaceful feeling as well as the daily devotionals giving you that peace and comfort.
I received a free copy of this book from Bethany House in exchange for my honest review rather it be good or bad. Thank you. show less
This is a collection of prayers that have come down through the centuries. Some were prayed by well-known people, and others were spoken by some I've never heard of, but all of them are meant to inspire and motivate. Many of these prayers are from United States Presidents, others are actually poems or hymns from songwriters and authors, and there are also prayers from people of the Bible. Some prayers are simple, and some are elaborate, but all of them address issues that we often face in show more our own lives.
I often find myself wondering how I should pray for a certain situation, and this book is the perfect resource. The prayers are listed by topics, and each prayer has historical notes and a devotion to further my understanding. I recommend '100 Prayers Every Christian Should Know' to those who find themselves searching for the right words, and I believe that it would be a wonderful addition in both a home or church library.
I received a copy of this book from Bethany House Publishers. There was no obligation for a favorable review. These are my own thoughts. show less
I often find myself wondering how I should pray for a certain situation, and this book is the perfect resource. The prayers are listed by topics, and each prayer has historical notes and a devotion to further my understanding. I recommend '100 Prayers Every Christian Should Know' to those who find themselves searching for the right words, and I believe that it would be a wonderful addition in both a home or church library.
I received a copy of this book from Bethany House Publishers. There was no obligation for a favorable review. These are my own thoughts. show less
Basically an essential companion if you want to understand how the Reformation turned out in England. More compact and weighs less than the Bible!
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- Works
- 123
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 2,375
- Popularity
- #10,806
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 10
- ISBNs
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