H. D. M. Spence (1836–1917)
Author of The Pulpit Commentary (23 Volume Set)
About the Author
Image credit: Unknown/uncredited
Series
Works by H. D. M. Spence
Pulpit Commentary, Volume 21: Thessalonians, Timothy, Titus, Philemon, Hebrews, James (1985) 119 copies
The Pulpit Commentary: Ezekiel (Vol. II) 34 copies
The Pulpit Commentary: James 20 copies
The Pulpit Commentary: Philippians 20 copies
The Pulpit Commentary: Lamentations 19 copies
The Pulpit Commentary: Colossians 19 copies
The Pulpit Commentary: Amos to Micah 11 copies
The Church of England 4 copies
The Pulpit Commentary : Samuel 3 copies
THE PULPIT COMMENTARY - 19 volumes 2 copies
The White Robe of Churches of the Xith Century: Pages from the Story of Gloucester Cathedral (2010) 1 copy
Golden Age of the Church 1 copy
The Pulpit Commentary XXI 1 & 2 Thessalonians, 1 & 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon, Hebrews, James 1 copy
The Pulpit Commentary Vol X 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Spence, Henry Donald Maurice
Spence Jones, Donald - Birthdate
- 1836-01-14
- Date of death
- 1917-11-02
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Harvard University
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge - Occupations
- cleric
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- London, Middlesex, England, UK
- Places of residence
- London, Middlesex, England, UK
- Map Location
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
This is the first volume of a set of 52 volumes of commentaries covering both the Old and New Testament. This volume includes an extensive 94 page introduction to The Old Testament and the Pentatuech. Then, as an illustration of how comprehensive all of these volumes are, 543 pages are devoted to the book of Genesis.
The structure of the commentary is somewhat unique. There is the commentary itself, or the "exposition" as it is called in this work. This is what you would normally expect from show more a commentary, except perhaps more scholarly -- including historical and cultural contexts, cross-references to other Biblical and classical text, references to Greek and other ancient text, etc.
Following the "exposition" is a section of "homiletics", apparently with the intent of providing topics and other guidance for those who would preach about a particular segment of text. Finally, there are excerpts from the actual homilies of various authors (preachers).
Overall, the serious student of the bible will find here a work that, although somewhat dated in some respects, is a very scholarly approach to Genesis.
John Hornbeck, GHTC Library, June 2008 show less
The structure of the commentary is somewhat unique. There is the commentary itself, or the "exposition" as it is called in this work. This is what you would normally expect from show more a commentary, except perhaps more scholarly -- including historical and cultural contexts, cross-references to other Biblical and classical text, references to Greek and other ancient text, etc.
Following the "exposition" is a section of "homiletics", apparently with the intent of providing topics and other guidance for those who would preach about a particular segment of text. Finally, there are excerpts from the actual homilies of various authors (preachers).
Overall, the serious student of the bible will find here a work that, although somewhat dated in some respects, is a very scholarly approach to Genesis.
John Hornbeck, GHTC Library, June 2008 show less
some Spines are in bad shape, some pages have some wear on them. But still very useful.
19 HB books
19 HB books
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Statistics
- Works
- 182
- Members
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- Rating
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- ISBNs
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