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First and Second Timothy, Titus (Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture) | 
enlarge | Author: George T., Sm Montague Publisher: Baker Academic Category: Book
List Price: $17.99 Buy New: $12.23 You Save: $5.76 (32%)
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Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 135269
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.6
ISBN: 0801035813 Dewey Decimal Number: 227.83077 EAN: 9780801035814 ASIN: 0801035813
Publication Date: November 1, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description In the second volume of the Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture (CCSS), George Montague offers a Catholic pastoral commentary on the letters to Timothy and Titus, presenting sound exegesis followed by reflection on the pastoral, theological, and practical applications of the text. The CCSS offers readable, informative commentaries from the best of contemporary Catholic scholarship to help readers rediscover the Word of God as a living word in which God himself is present. Each commentary relates Scripture to life, is faithfully Catholic, and is supplemented by features designed to help readers understand the Bible more deeply and use it more effectively in teaching, preaching, evangelization, and other forms of ministry. This series is perfect for professional and lay leaders engaged in parish ministry, lay Catholics interested in serious Bible study, and Catholic students.
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| Customer Reviews:
a little less catholic than I imagined January 2, 2009 A recent acquisition is one of the two inaugural volumes of Baker's "Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture" (cf. also, The Gospel of Mark). There are a handful of significant gaps within traditional evangelical theology, many of which could be addressed with the infusion of varied voices within the Christian tradition (I remember The Professor - I. H. Marshall - mentioning a few years ago that we needed to see a liberal commentary on the New Testament emerge). Dialogue is the key to advancing our theology, and with the plethora of commentaries which are flooding the marketplace it is striking how few innovative or new perspectives are being given. This leads to the dulling of our own biblical understanding.
Having said this, when I purchased this volume I was hopeful that I would have more points of healthy disagreement or differing perspective that I would be forced to work through some of the text in a new way. In fact, I remember that my reasoning on the sales floor in Boston was that I would choose the volume on the Pastoral Epistles over Mark because of the role of church tradition and leadership which would be addressed in the application sections of the work. Unfortunately for my expectation, this was definitely not the case - it took 188 pages for a piece of significant disagreement with what Montague has offered. I will say, however, that when it finally came the dam burst with his assertion: "Hence, sola Scriptura is a nonbiblical teaching that is used to affirm a nonexistent biblical teaching" (188).
Aside from this (which might contain a caricature of the Protestant view if pressed), the commentary itself is a helpful introductory text to the Pastoral Epistles which would be appropriate for many who seek to teach or study Scripture. There is no overt Roman Catholic teaching in the text, though it is by no means hidden in the woodwork. The focus remains on the message which Paul (assumed author of the three) is offering to Timothy, Titus and their respective congregations so as to properly hear the message being inspired by the Spirit to the church today. Many times while reading the work I felt as though Montague had a good way of phrasing and capturing various thoughts and presenting them to the reader. I look forward to incorporating some of this into my work at the church.
From a scholarly perspective, there is nothing new found in this volume - it is intended to be introductory and devotional. There are sidebar notes and insertions throughout which focus on the biblical background as well as some aspect of the historical tradition which has been preserved within the RCC (in fact, on strength is the presence of the voices from tradition whereas many evangelical commentaries would simply not have ventured). My only other criticism is that the application sections to each portion sometimes come across as strained and/or hurried by the author. In other words, these do not always feel at home in the text and occasionally reach the stage of afterthought. With so much solid work being done on this level in other areas, Baker would have done well to safeguard this feature of the commentary against such pitfalls.
Perhaps the tone of the commentary can best be captured with a line from the commentary on 1 Timothy 1:13: "Changed lives are the seal of the gospel's authenticity, and no change is more remarkable in the New Testament than that of Paul" (42). Standing on solid hermeneutical ground, Montague provides a good commentary on the devotional use of the text for those desiring to bear the fruit of their faith.
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