It is a close second to the ESV in a
complete library sense. Better concordance than most study bibles, exhaustive notes that rival the ESV, great color photos, maps and charts throughout. Very good book introductions. Helpful articles in the back on a variety of topics.
It leans reformed like the ESV, but doesnt make a huge fuss about. It tries to be balanced in Revelation and present multiple view points.
Chronologically presents the events of the gospels differently(moslty between John and synotpoics) than the ESV study Bible. It also holds to a AD 30 crucifixion vs the
AD 33 of thr ESV. Some nice differences to help provide a balanced prospective.....i could go on and on. If you have any detailed questions, let me know.
To me it is hands down one of the top 2 study bibles out to there.
Yes, the Calvinist view point is more pronounced in the ESV study Bible.
The rest of the Bible content is give and take....the book intros are better on the ESV Study Bible,
but the concordance is better in the new Zondervan NIV study Bible. Pretty close to being equal study Bibles overall.
Absolutely would come down to preference. I would pick based upon which translation you preferred.
My wife uses the old NIV study Bible(84 version) still. She prefers it to the new one. She refuses to change translation from the '84 edition. She stocked up on the '84 translation on Christianbook.com :) Hard to blame her. It is waht she grew up on. Overall, I believe the new Zondervan Study Bible to be the better of the 2, but I do acknowledge that older edition is a fine Study Bible as well.
It is weird having "color" in your Bible as one poster noted, but you do get used to it.
This thread shouldn't have been posted in the Translations Forum, the topic is a Study Bible,... that is the notes that comes with the Bible.
Study notes are not "gender inclusive".
The study notes have very little to do with a particular translation (this can be shown when you can purchase the same notes with different translations).
The NIV Study Bible's notes fit the translation. They are rather broadly focused so as not to offend a particular group.
The first place I look at in a Study Bible's notes is Genesis 1.
The NIV SB notes in this section wouldn't offend a young earther or a old earther
The notes point to areas of agreement.
Recently Study Bible's notes have been making the Bible's thicker and heavier.
At some point a student must realize these are only a simple introduction to the verse or topic being discussed.... a fuller more detailed study requires outside reference material.
It does. But laying that aside it is an improved translation of the NIV84. If you use the NAC or Pillar commentaries. The vast majority of places where the NIV84 was critized by the commentators, the new version fixed. Example would be how the NIV84 has John using the word "faith" several times in the books he authored. However John never used the Greek word for faith. He used so form of belief or believe. The NIV2011 corrected the mistranslations.