After a break of many months, I am happy to announce that
the Coffee Cup Commentaries podcast
is starting again. There will be some
changes, to which the new visual logo attests.
It will still be found at Ancient Faith (of course) and will still offer
every weekday a five to six minute casual exegesis of the Scriptures as we look
at the text verse-by-verse and phrase-by-phrase. But the field has been expanded, so that
instead of confining ourselves to the New Testament, we will together look at
the Old Testament too. That is partly
because since the podcast series began in 2008 we have worked over the New
Testament material pretty thoroughly, but also because this allows us to
examine the Old Testament together in ways not otherwise possible.
For I am
credibly told that, weird as it may sound, commentaries on the Old Testament
are not that easy to sell, and it has been a while at least since one of them
made the Best Sellers List of the New
York Times. I have been often asked
by many people to write a commentary on the Book
of Isaiah (one person even giving me a good title for it, The Fifth Gospel), and I agree that such
material would be good for a Christian to have.
There are good commentaries out there already naturally, such as John
Oswalt’s massive two-volume work which forms part of the New International Commentary on the Old Testament. The work is massive (volume one runs to 746
pages and volume two to 755 pages), which means that the books come with an appropriately
massive price tag. They are wonderful
and scholarly, they form part of an ongoing dialogue with other scholars in the
field, and should form part of any student’s technical research.
But that is just the
problem. The majority of people whom I
meet in the Church have neither the time, the money, nor the inclination to
plough through such massive volumes, but they still have questions about Isaiah
and the rest of the Scriptures. It was
for them that I wrote the Orthodox Bible
Study Companion Series. I appreciate
the thanks they send me for the work, including their repeated calls for an Old
Testament encore and an expansion of
the project to include the Old Testament as well. But like I said, it is difficult to sell such
books to more than a few people, and of course any responsible publisher will
have to take such inconvenient truths into account. So, no Orthodox
Bible Study Companion Series on the Old Testament any time soon. But we can still deal with the Old Testament
texts, even if in a more casual way than could be accomplished in a written
commentary. That is why I have agreed to
re-launch the Coffee Cup Commentaries,
with an emphasis on the Old Testament material, beginning with Isaiah. I hope you will join me. It is coming to an Ancient Faith website near
you.
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