Sorry for this, but I was unable to correct, by editing, an error in the preceding post. This is how it should appear:
Titebond and similar glues are fine for furniture and other non-stressed applications, indoors or out, depending on application. The truth is that they creep over time. Not much, and not enough to affect furniture, but they DO creep. Epoxies DO NOT creep, if they are quality formulations. And, if one wants to examine the applications of epoxy to wood, just check out the Gougeon Brothers, the folks who make the WEST system of epoxies. They are absolutely the strongest and most-durable adhesives for wood (and other) substrates available to the general public. WEST began its life offering glues to people who make ice-racing boats. Few things on this planet are put to the stresses of an ice-racing "boat". I KNOW about this stuff; I am a former design engineer and furniture maker, who also made a bunch of boats; nowhere I have used the WEST epoxies have those adhesives ever failed. Nothing available to the common public, can compare, or even come close.
The moisture-cure polyurethanes (like Gorilla glue) have extremely-limited applications, and are not worth one's consideration.