

📖 Unlock timeless wisdom with the ultimate Catholic study companion!
The Ignatius Catholic Study Bible: Old and New Testaments is a hardcover, English-language edition published by Ignatius Press in December 2024. It offers comprehensive scripture coverage enriched with expert commentary, making it a top-rated, durable study resource favored by thousands globally.





























| ASIN | B0DGS9GF6Z |
| Best Sellers Rank | #26,460 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #9,766 in Textbooks & Study Guides |
| Customer reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (839) |
| Dimensions | 18.8 x 7.37 x 27.18 cm |
| Edition | Standard Edition |
| ISBN-10 | 1586176137 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1586176136 |
| Item weight | 2.68 Kilograms |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 2320 pages |
| Publication date | 22 December 2024 |
| Publisher | Ignatius Press |
I**R
So happy to have it.
So happy to have it.
J**A
Best purchase for the year 2025!
I am so happy that through Amazon US, this treasure is made available here in UAE. I bought it free of charge and it was delivered 2 weeks from my purchase date! The book is compact and heavy because it is packed with notes from cover to cover! I am so thrilled to read the scripture expounded!
V**E
Magnificent!
This Catholic Study Bible is Highly recommended.
D**E
Academic resource
G**E
I will qualify my review by stating that I am Catholic-adjacent, and considering entering into the Catholic church soon. I will also add that I am a lifelong student of the Bible. Studying scripture is my single biggest hobby, and I am also a Christian author. Anyways, here's my review. The Ignatius Press Study Bible is unbelievable. I've had mine for 3 weeks, and I'm convinced this is the best study Bible on the market (perhaps only second to the Word on Fire Bible, which isn't really the same). Before I bought it, I borrowed several competing study Bibles from friends and the Library, and there's really no comparison – the Ignatius Press Study Bible, which took around 25 years to complete from what I've heard, is the only one of its kind. I've read about 5-6 of the included essays, and they were all brilliantly written, and I learned quite a bit from them. The commentary strikes a good balance between modern scholarship and traditional beliefs. It doesn't shy away from the tough questions (i.e. the divine council in the OT, the glorification of killing in Joshua, the multiple authors of Isaiah, etc.) That said, it mostly leans conservative with its interpretations (e.g., it never hints at parts of Genesis or Joshua as being ahistorical, or anything like that). The style of interpretation didn't feel surface level at all. Unlike many of the competing study Bibles I read, the Ignatius Press Study Bible has already taught me a ton. It has notes on the cultural contexts, the Hebrew and Greek wording, quotes from the Church Fathers, etc. In fact, some of the pages had so much commentary that there were more footnotes than actual Scripture (the first page of Genesis only gets through three verses because the commentary is so stacked!) It has the typical notes you'd expect (e.g., explaining difficult passages), but also, typological and anagogical interpretations that I'd never have come to on my own. That said, I still find myself googling often. There aren't a ton of notes on the poetic and chaistic structure of the text. There also aren't Strongs numbers for looking up Hebrew and Greek words. The style of commentary is definitely a better fit for a Catholic than for a Messianic Jew or someone who really skews towards the Jewish roots of the faith. In fact, this study Bible is unapologetically Catholic. But that is its greatest strength. This Bible is a behemoth. It's almost as wide as a tin can. I can't imagine getting the floppy leather version – hard back is the only way to go. In fact, while looking into which version to get, I learned that many people returned their floppy leather versions to get the hardback version. So maybe do yourself the favor and do that ahead of time. One strange omission is that there are no bookmark ribbons. Also, there are no tabs on the side to easily find the book you're looking for. That's not a big deal, but I wanted to mention it. As far as the RSV-2 translation goes, I find it to be very readable except for the way it translates the names of people and places. There's often weird apostrophes (e.g., Abraham's brother is Na'hor instead of Nahor.) Otherwise, I find it to be just as readable as ESV, NASB, and other mainline translations.
P**Y
Very useful with detailed explanations. Perfect companion for bible studies.
J**A
Me gustan sus comentarios al pie de página aunque estén escritos en inglés
D**R
Great notes , I didn’t expect it to be as big as it is but I took a look at the notes and I was impressed with them 👍 Also most as big as one chad mode from choq