The NIV Zondervan Study Bible releases on August 25.
- 50-page PDF sample
- the book’s website
- also available from Logos Bible Software
D. A. Carson is the general editor; Desi Alexander, Rick Hess, and Doug Moo are the associate editors; and I served as the assistant editor. I worked on this study Bible full-time for four years and for a fifth year part-time. I managed the project and helped copyedit all of the notes and essays for content and style.
Update on 12/11/2015. Here is a 38-minute video of a panel that Tom Schreiner moderated about our study Bible. All of the editors (except Desi Alexander) participated in this panel the Evangelical Theological Society on November 19, 2015.
Update on 8/28/2018. Three years later Zondervan is repackaging this resource as the NIV Biblical Theology Study Bible.
I briefly explain my role in this video (1:55 min.):
The study Bible has completely fresh content from new contributors. Its audience is as general as the target audience for the NIV itself: the English-speaking world.
As I edited this study Bible, I consulted many other study Bibles. In my view these were the four best study Bibles at the time:
- ESV Study Bible (which I warmly recommended in JETS in 2009)
- NIV Study Bible (which is remaining in print)
- HCSB Study Bible
- NLT Study Bible
Now I think that the top two study Bibles available are the ESV Study Bible and the NIV Zondervan Study Bible.
- They share many of the same strengths that any good study Bible does: the introductions to each book of the Bible explain the broad literary context and relevant historical-cultural context, and the study notes explain individual parts in that larger context.
- They have complementary strengths: a major strength of the ESV Study Bible is systematic theology, and a major strength of the NIV Zondervan Study Bible is biblical theology. And that’s not surprising since the general editor for the ESV Study Bible is Wayne Grudem and the general editor for the NIV Zondervan Study Bible is Don Carson.
Biblical theology is a main distinctive of the NIV Zondervan Study Bible. In two recent “Ask Pastor John” episodes, Tony Reinke asked Don Carson about this:
- What Is Biblical Theology? And Do We Need It? (Episode 644)
- Why We Must Understand the Temple in God’s Plan Today (Episode 645)
(Those links include both the audio and transcripts.)
There are five theological disciplines: exegesis, biblical theology, historical theology, systematic theology, and practical theology. I briefly explain them in this short video (2:50 min.):
I try to show how Harry Potter illustrates biblical theology in this 4-minute video:
The notes in the NIV Zondervan Study Bible make biblical-theological connections, and the study Bible concludes with 28 essays on biblical theology:
- The Story of the Bible: How the Good News About Jesus Is Central (Timothy Keller)
- The Bible and Theology (D. A. Carson)
- A Biblical-Theological Overview of the Bible (D. A. Carson)
- The Glory of God (James M. Hamilton Jr.)
- Creation (Henri Blocher)
- Sin (Kevin DeYoung)
- Covenant (Paul R. Williamson)
- Law (T. D. Alexander)
- Temple (T. D. Alexander)
- Priest (Dana M. Harris)
- Sacrifice (Jay A. Sklar)
- Exile and Exodus (Thomas R. Wood)
- The Kingdom of God (T. D. Alexander)
- Sonship (D. A. Carson)
- The City of God (T. D. Alexander)
- Prophets and Prophecy (Sam Storms)
- Death and Resurrection (Philip S. Johnston)
- People of God (Moisés Silva)
- Wisdom (Daniel J. Estes)
- Holiness (Andrew David Naselli)
- Justice (Brian S. Rosner)
- Wrath (Christopher W. Morgan)
- Love and Grace (Graham A. Cole)
- The Gospel (Greg D. Gilbert)
- Worship (David G. Peterson)
- Mission (Andreas J. Köstenberger)
- Shalom (Timothy Keller)
- The Consummation (Douglas J. Moo)
In addition to writing the above biblical-theological essay on holiness, I coauthored the notes for three New Testament books:
- John (coauthored with Don Carson)
- 2 Peter (coauthored with Doug Moo)
- Jude (coauthored with Doug Moo)
And I’m grateful that two of my colleagues at Bethlehem College & Seminary contributed God-glorifying, Jesus-exalting notes to the study Bible:
- Jason DeRouchie wrote the notes on Zephaniah. (Jason recently drafted a commentary on Zephaniah for Crossway’s ESV Bible Expository Commentary series and is currently finishing a more detailed commentary on Zephaniah for the Zondervan Exegetical Commentary on the Old Testament series.)
- Brian Tabb wrote the notes on Revelation. (Brian is currently writing a biblical theology of Revelation for Don Carson’s New Studies in Biblical Theology series.)
One more video: This explains the NIV translation and its Committee on Bible Translation (2:05 min.):
Seth Kempf says
Hi Andy,
Exciting! With the purchase of a physical book, will there also be access to the material in an online format (similar to the ESV and NLT Study Bibles)?
Thanks,
Seth
Andy Naselli says
“Free Digital Access for use on computer, phone, and tablet.”
http://nivzondervanstudybible.com/overview/
Seth Kempf says
Excellent!
Wes Burroughs says
It’s so exciting to see a study Bible come out where D. A. Carson is the general editor. And I’m so glad that the emphases with this study Bible is on biblical theology. To be honest I was wondering what would be the point of getting this new study Bible when the ESV Study Bible was so well done and still fairly recent.
By the way, I just pre-ordered a copy from Amazon, it was 50% off at $25.
Benjamin Vrbicek says
Wow. Looks great. I remember when Carson announced this at TGC in 13. It must feel great to have such a huge, lengthy project rolling out. Good work, Andy.
Dwight Gingrich says
Thanks much for your excellent work on this study Bible! You have done very well.
I find it interesting that you consider the ESVSB and the NIVZSB to now be the two best study Bibles available. I certainly like them both, and just did an extensive comparison of the two here (writing especially for my conservative Anabaptist audience): http://dwightgingrich.com/niv-zondervan-study-bible-review-comparison-esv-study-bible/
If you have any reflections on the accuracy of my assessment of their respective theological leanings, I would be interested to hear them. Blessings!
Flip Michaels says
Dr. Andrew D. Naselli:
Thank you for your efforts on the NIVZSB. I’ll be teaching an OT survey class using it as our textbook for all of 2017. Do you have any additional resources related to the NIVZSB itself that you might deem helpful for the teacher/professor?
Grateful,
Flip
Andy Naselli says
Two forthcoming companion books may serve you: one by Jason DeRouchie and the other by me.