Dr. J. A. Moorman, a missionary, pastor, evangelist, scholar, and author, has written a series of Bible Commentaries and Surveys that are: King James Version, premillennial, pre-tribulational, dispensational, instructive and devotional that uphold at every point the King James Version, the Providential Standard Translation in the English-speaking world; and the Inspired and Preserved Text upon which it is based. This book, which is an A4 (large) size and 300 pages, is "Daniel" that recognizes that the Bible Institute movement of the earlier part of the 20th Century (Moody, Philadelphia, Los Angeles etc) and those influenced by it, which produced much of the best Bible study material available for believers of the last days, that recognizes that Matthew Henry's Commentary (and allowing for its lack of understanding in prophetic and dispensational truth) remains as Spurgeon said: "First among the mighty for general usefulness" (Commenting and Commentaries), that recognizes the Scofield Reference Bible (1917 edition), which while rejecting its few errors (textual, gap theory etc.) remains the best compendium of succinctly stated Biblical truth, and that recognizes that a commentary should be able to directly facilitate the teaching and preaching of the Scriptures. To help toward this, outlining is used.
Daniel, A Commentary and Survey Series: The Times of the Gentiles and the Times of Jerusalem
Dr. J. A. Moorman, a missionary, pastor, evangelist, scholar, and author, has written a series of Bible Commentaries and Surveys that are: King James Version, premillennial, pre-tribulational, dispensational, instructive and devotional that uphold at every point the King James Version, the Providential Standard Translation in the English-speaking world; and the Inspired and Preserved Text upon which it is based. This book, which is an A4 (large) size and 300 pages, is "Daniel" that recognizes that the Bible Institute movement of the earlier part of the 20th Century (Moody, Philadelphia, Los Angeles etc) and those influenced by it, which produced much of the best Bible study material available for believers of the last days, that recognizes that Matthew Henry's Commentary (and allowing for its lack of understanding in prophetic and dispensational truth) remains as Spurgeon said: "First among the mighty for general usefulness" (Commenting and Commentaries), that recognizes the Scofield Reference Bible (1917 edition), which while rejecting its few errors (textual, gap theory etc.) remains the best compendium of succinctly stated Biblical truth, and that recognizes that a commentary should be able to directly facilitate the teaching and preaching of the Scriptures. To help toward this, outlining is used.