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J**5
Perfect combination of bibles complete
Earlier this year I decided to make an addition to my translation library which consisted of ... wait for it ... just the KJV. I grew up with the King James bible and love the elegant flow of the old English. I also enjoyed the vast resources built around the study component centered on the KJV text. After doing a lot of research about different translations I came to love the ESV. I still read and study from the KJV, but wanted to include another translation that was faithful to the manuscripts they translated and the ESV was it. The purpose of the review isn't to discuss translations, but bible formats and there purpose in absorbing the word of God.My plan was to build a library of bibles and resources, i.e., study bibles, commentaries, concordances, translations, bible types, etc... Since my KJV library was fairly well established I began the search for the perfect combination for the ESV. My wish list included bibles for reading, on the go, and personal home study. During my research I found several iterations of the ESV translation that I thought would work but nothing really stuck for the three purposes I was looking for. Since this was the first time I had spent more than $30 on a bible I didn't feel comfortable going completely nuts and buying a $200 bible (I thought I would dip my toe first). When I saw the Pitt Minion and it's corresponding partner in the wide-margin I knew this is what I was looking for. So I purchased the Pitt Minion in calf split and wide-margin in hardcover. I couldn't be happier with my choice. I know they are the bottom of the barrel when it comes to quality of covers in their category, but to be honest I don't think I forfeited anything with this combination choice. I feel better about the money spent and if I were to do it all over again I would choose the same covers. The calf split Pitt Minion has softened up a lot ... the bible opens flat in all places with ease! The grain feels so good in the hand! The print is unbelievably readable for its size. The hardcover wide-margin is actually (IMO) better than the soft cover options, because my sole intention for the bible is to use it for personal study. The bible doesn't come to bed with me (often) and is mostly used on the coffee table. Also, it opens flat in all places. The selling point was the fact that the pages correspond with each other. This is perfect for me because I have a visual memory.Now this left me with one more aspect of my search for the perfect combination of bibles. I needed a bible for long periods of reading. Well, lucky for me, Cambridge fulfilled that desire as well in the recent released Clarion. I purchased the calfskin this time because it was only $10 more at evangelicalbible.com than the calf split. To be honest, I like the cover, but would've been fine with the calf split. The one nice thing that may maintain my first decision is the red under gold gilt edges (they are really nice!). I plan to never write in this bible ever ... it's just for reading. That's why I have the wide-margin. I can not begin to tell you how perfect the layout, text and size of this bible is. It is literally a perfect reading bible for me. The font really appears much larger than 9 pt. The pages do curl in the middle of the bible, but I think with time the problem will go away. If not, it won't matter because the rest of the bible is perfect! If they used thicker paper the bible would've been twice as thick (wouldn't work!). It's the compromise you make when looking for the best reading bible on the market.So that concludes my ESV library ... for now. The Cambridge Pitt Minion (calf split), Wide-Margin (hardcover), and Clarion (calfskin).You will love any one of these bibles in isolation and could easily get away with just one. If that is was what you are planning to do ... my order of preference would be (1) Clarion, (2) Pitt Minion, and (3) Wide-Margin. If you want to take notes and only want the Clarion or Pitt Minion you can always buy a notebook. Know that each of these editions will last you a very, very long time!Go, enjoy the word of God, and share your experience with others!
M**D
Small and Powerful Presentation
Some smaller tools are more useful than larger ones. A dentist uses a tiny drill and not a concrete jackhammer. (Thank goodness). A smart phone should fit in my jeans pocket; I don’t need a backpack to tote it around. The reason the Lone Ranger carried a six-shooter in his holster instead of a rocket launcher is that the shoulder-fired weapon couldn’t fit on his horse!When it comes to Bibles, there are very good reasons to have very large Bibles. Some study Bibles have more material than the first year of seminary. My study Bible is so large we have to rent a U-Haul to take it to church. Other Bibles need to have extra-large print for aging eyes. I get that. No problem.On the other hand, some very quality Bibles come in very small formats that are extremely useful to the lover of the Word of God. Such is the Cambridge Pitt Minion series, including the two Bibles featured in the review below. Today I will be doing a duel-review of both the ESV (brown) and NASB (black): both in the same size, text, font, and calf split leather.Vital Statistics:• Publisher: Cambridge• Printing: Jongbloed, Netherlands• Translations: ESV and NASB• Binding: Smyth sewn/pastedown interior• Cover: Brown and Black calfskin• Columns: Double• Text: Red letter• Font: Lexicon No. 1 in 6.75 and 7pt.• References: Center column• Study Notes: None• Size: 6.85’ X 4.75’ X .0.85’• Yapp: 0.25’• Ribbons: (1)• Gilt edges: gold• Head and tail bands: brown and yellow (brown edition); red and yellow (black edition)• Features: Concordance, maps• Cost: approximately $85.00 USDThis is going to be a love it or hate it Bible for many readers and it all comes down to what I mentioned in the lead in, the size of the book. This is a small Bible. It’s not quite so small that it can fit into the front pocket of your best church button-down, but it is small enough to get into the front pocket of your day-off comfy jeans. Let me be clear: if you struggle with small print, do not get this Bible. You will return it the moment you open it up.But stay with me young-eyed folks: this Bible has some serious firepower if you can get past the 7 pt. font that is used in the main text of the Bible. (The references are even smaller).Type, Font, and PrintThe first time I held one of these Pitt Minion’s, I was borrowing it for a few moments as I listed to Tim Keller speak at our denomination’s general assembly. Keller faded out and the Pitt took the center of the platform. I loved it! Then I opened it up. “Whew.” I thought. “That small font is going to take some getting used to.”Alright, so let’s talk about the font. How bad is it? Well, it’s pretty small. I like to give a Bible the old “quarter dollar” test. When I place a George Washington onto a prose section of the text, the coin covers up ten whole lines of text. That’s pretty small folks. Just for comparison, the Crossway Legacy gets a seven by the same standard.At the same time, the “form factor” was just right in my hand. I thought about it for a few weeks and sprung for my own Pitt Minion with a gift card I received at a speaking engagement. I am so glad I did. After getting my own copy (the ESV in brown came first) I realized just how clear the print really was. Small, but exceptionally clear like it was printed with a laser engraving tool by NASA or something.The double columns with center references are amazing. Something just works here; like Cambridge stumbled onto the perfect algorithm for column width and reference placement. It is beautiful, crisp and uses almost every square inch of the page.AestheticsThe first thing you will notice about this Bible is that the hand-to-Bible size ratio is perfect. If we have Bibles in Heaven, they will be this size and all of our eyes will be piercing enough to read them. This Bible fits the hand like a glove. In fact, that’s exactly the analogy I would use to describe it: remember that baseball mitt you used to take into the street to play ball? How perfect it fit you that second year after you broke it in for a season? Yeah… Now we’re talking.The calf split leather is a steal for the price. (When they split leather across the length of the hide, the better part becomes known as “top grain,” while the lesser side is dubbed calf split). There are several more expensive versions of this Bible out there. I know that goatskin is all the rage among the serious collectors. But this split calf works in so nice after a while, I really don’t think I’d spring for the upgrade. I’ve been carrying it around for a couple months in my messenger bag and it now feels like the leather quality somehow went up several notches.A few months after I’d had my ESV in brown, I received a tip that the NASB in black was on sale. Some of us thought they had put $28 on the sale page instead of $82 by mistake. Actually, I suspect that might be correct. So I bought the second one too. I still like the brown more. The texture of the grain is much more visible, nuanced, and mature. I also realized how much my brown ESV had broken in after a few months when I held the stiffer NASB right out of the box. I have every reason to believe it too would loosen up after a month of carry-around.I’ll say this: if you think the leather-over-cardboard style of paste-down binding is too rigid when you first open this Bible up, do what I did: simply tote it around in your bag or briefcase for a month and you won’t believe how soft this leather actually becomes.As for the other features, the gilding is spot-on Cambridge quality. The binding springs open like a bird of prey ready to take flight. The line matching is faultless. Aesthetically - for looks and feel - it has neither weakness nor peer.UsesHere’s the bottom line: this Bible can easily be the Bible you take everywhere. As a pastor myself, I always need a Bible. All the time. If I have a few moments waiting at Starbucks, I’m in the Word. When I go to staff meetings, we read and study together. When I go to the hospital, I always take my Pitt Minion. Since it does fit in the pocket of my pants, I can tap the hand sanitizer and scrub up without setting it my Bible down on a germy sink or changing station. It comes right out of my bag in the evenings again for elder’s meetings.No, I probably wouldn’t want to use this Bible for my everyday devotional reading, but it is there when I need it. Trusty. Reliable. Just the right tool for the job. And that’s the point: this thing is going to be your “take anywhere” Bible.
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