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Hardcover
First published March 1, 2005
We are blessed to live in an age and society where we are virtually swimming in a sea of Bible study resources. The amount of quality commentaries, books, lectures, sermons, study guides, courses, journals, and magazines available is staggering. Along with those resources, study Bibles abound. There are plenty of good ones and a few that easily qualify as great. Over the years, one of my favorite study Bibles has been the Reformation Study Bible from Ligonier Ministry’s publishing branch, Reformation Trust. When I heard that an updated edition was coming out, there was no decision to be made. I would be getting one . . . at least. I had given a donation where the incentive was a hardback copy and, due to a great response, I found myself waiting during the back-order process. I also found myself blessed with a little extra money and the overwhelming urge to splurge for a leather-bound copy.
Yay! Wait, let me say it more accurately. YAY!! Not to throw a shoulder out of place with an excessive amount of back patting, but that was one of the greatest impulse decisions I have ever made. And, for the record, the statistics involving my impulse decisions could not be disputed due to a small sample size. Large sample and all, this decision was one of the best.
Back to aesthetics, there is some definite shadowing. I highlight that it is an aesthetic issue because it does not in any way hinder the reading experience. I would love a thicker paper and a larger font on Bible’s like these. However, I understand that in order to provide this, we would all be carrying Bibles around that look like Jonathan Edwards pulpit Bible. So, apart from taking a wheelbarrow to Sunday school or removing some of these tremendous resources, we will all just have to endure some shadowing. And by "we", I mean those of us who have the time, energy, or compulsion to pick that particular nit.
Now, for a quick soapbox followed by a celebration. First off, let me encourage you to treat yourself to a great book and go read Carl Trueman’s The Creedal Imperative the next chance you get. You will be blessed. Now, endure me for a moment. As we have moved away from being unified, confessional believers and moved towards a “what does the Bible mean to you” culture, we have lost a whole lot. We would benefit greatly from grounding ourselves in the confessions and creeds of the Church. As great as study notes are, there is so much to be learned and enjoyed from reading the creeds, confessions, and catechisms of the Church. I have wanted all of my Bibles to include these for a while. As excited as I was to meet the slipcover when I unboxed the RSB, I was exponentially more excited when I flipped to the back and saw “The Heidelberg Cathechism” staring me in the face. The RSB includes the Apostles Creed, Nicene Creed, Chalcedonian Definition of Faith, the Westminster Standards, the Three Forms of Unity, and the 1689 London Baptist Confession of Faith. While the notes, as far as I have seen, do not cross reference the standards like the Spirit of the Reformation Study Bible did, it is still a blessing to have them so readily available. And maybe, just maybe, for the next update we can have the notes linked to the Creeds and Confessions as well!
As if providing a slip-cased, leather-covered, theologically-rich, study Bible was not enough, Ligonier threw in boocoodles of extra goodies. When you register the Bible online, you get to reap the benefits of $400 worth of extra resources, including a Ligonier Connect membership for three months, a six-month Tabletalk subscription, six e-books, and eight teaching series. I borrowed from the website to show all of the resources at the bottom. In a world where actors messing up lines and giggling/cursing about it is considered an “extra,” it might leave the wrong impression to tag that label on these goodies. Fight the temptation to think that “extra” means “little value,” these blessings are blessings indeed.