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  • Submitted: Jun 08 2012 09:32 PM
  • Last Updated: Dec 31 2021 08:37 AM
  • File Size: 130.48MB
  • Views: 56134
  • Downloads: 24,550
  • Author: Heinrich Meyer
  • e-Sword Version: 9.x - 10.x
  • Tab Name: H. Meyer

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Download Meyer, Heinrich - Critical and Exegetical Commentary (20 vols) 1.0

* * * * * 32 Votes
New Testament Word Study Exegesis Greek
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Author:
Heinrich Meyer

e-Sword Version:
9.x - 10.x

Tab Name:
H. Meyer

Heinrich Meyer's Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament (20 volumes) is also called Meyer's Commentary. This is verse by verse, Greek, exegetical commentary—over 40 megabytes of text!

For Greek text and grammar, Meyer's Commentary was the best at the time it was written and is frequently cited by contemporary authors. With a heavy emphasis on text and grammar, Meyer addresses the questions of the text. Meyer also serves a synopses of other authors' viewpoints, many of which are long since unavailable without hours of work with inter-library loans. Although you may not agree with every conclusion, the analysis is invaluable.

Meyer represents the synthesis of German theology in the same vein as J. P. Lange's Commentary, except without the homiletical analysis. Philip Schaff, who edited the American Edition of Lange's Commentary, said Meyer's Commentary is, " The ablest grammatical exegete of the age".

Meyer's Commentary also made Cyril Barber's list of recommended commentaries for preachers. In The Minister's Library Volume 1, page 83, Barber writes Meyer's Commentary is "marked by fine scholarship … and close attention is paid to critical details. Theology is blended with exegesis in expounding the text.

Who's Who in Christian History (1992) said Meyer's Commentary "sets a standard for modern critical exegesis of the New Testament; it is a series that continues to be consulted by scholars."

About Heinrich Meyer
Meyer was born in Gotha and studied theology at the University of Jena. Thereafter he taught in a private school at Grone and then pastored churches in various German cities from 1822 to 1848. In addition to pastoring, he devoted his time to writing commentaries on the New Testament based on the principle of historico–grammatical exegesis. A life long project, he started Meyer's Commentary at age 27. He worked on and revised the commentary set until age 72. Meyer also worked on the revision of Luther’s translation of the Bible

e-Sword Edition:
In addition to the verse by verse commentary, every Book and Chapter has comments. Don't forget to look there! The Chapter sections sometimes contain valuable nuggets.

In the printed edition, text was compressed to avoid paragraph breaks in the text's analysis. For easier on-screen study, these long paragraphs were broken, usually across word boundaries (i.e. discussing a new word yields a new line).

This commentary is correctly divided by verse (no chapter dumps here). The Greek text is properly recognized and formatted.

Footnotes are rendered as gray text, usually just below the paragraph where referenced or at the end of a verse comment.

If you're a serious student of Hebrew, you may wish to change your e-Sword Hebrew font to "Cardo", "SBL Hebrew", etc. e-Sword's default Hebrew font, Titus Cyberbit Basic, distorts the accent marks of the Hebrew characters (as it frequently does in other resources as well). In e-Sword, click Options and then Fonts to change the Hebrew font.

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Hello, I like this commantry as the one by John Bengel, but I find that it only allows verse by verse viewing, which can be rather slow when trying to read comments of an entire passage. Is there are way that I can view a complete chapter, rather than a single verse? Thanks very much for the great works on this web site. Best wishes, Martin

hello, l like to have book how can i have it thang you

i'm looking for spanish books can any one help me please 

I can't download the .exe file. it calls download unsuccessful. I know you're a big help

i like book amen 

Thanks for the sacrifice in converting this one. Blessings

What edition of Meyer is this?  Could you please give me a complete bibliographic reference?  I love Meyer, I just realized that this is different from the paper edition I use.

Hello, I like this commantry as the one by John Bengel, but I find that it only allows verse by verse viewing, which can be rather slow when trying to read comments of an entire passage. Is there are way that I can view a complete chapter, rather than a single verse? Thanks very much for the great works on this web site. Best wishes, Martin

On e-Sword, you can choose to see the entire Book, Chapter or just the Verse. The buttons at the top are BCV. Sorry this is 7 years late.

Do you have the commentary on H. Meyer in iOS? Thank you!

On e-Sword, you can choose to see the entire Book, Chapter or just the Verse. The buttons at the top are BCV. Sorry this is 7 years late.

This little trick is still extremely helpful. Was wondering what the BCV buttons were for!

 

Thanks (2 years later)!


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