
This new resource delivers at the same stellar level the earlier Old Testament Handbook did. Same beauty. Same value. Same variety. Same pathway to hours of study. Same success. I see them as a pair where one demands the other.
What will you get out of this book? Whatever you put into it. In other words, there’s too much to run out quickly. Charts have a unique value to say so much on one page. If you are a visual learner your value is double. I love to read, but I’ve long been sold on the value of charts. For me, they are often a crystallization of a large amount of material. Sometimes they plant a long-term portrait in your mind.
In my opinion, the charts on the Gospels are the richest here. Some charts explain something of a presentation of the individual contribution of a particular Gospel while others trace an idea across all of them. There are some helpful maps as well. They don’t because of color scheme look exactly like any other work either.
The only negative is that Revelation seemed a little under covered. Likely a desire to not get labeled with a specific perspective was the reason.
I hope the creativity of the publishers continues with other works in this style. I think they’ve struck a rich vein and should keep digging. For now, you will want to get this one.
I received this book free from the publisher. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.