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Books > Christianity > The Bible > New Testament
This study has been specially commissioned to cover An Introduction
to the Gospel of Luke and Themes in the Synoptic Gospels, Units AS
1 and A2 1, of the revised CCEA Religious Studies specification. It
has been through a meticulous quality assurance process. The author
provides a detailed introduction to the Gospel of Luke, including
its key narratives and themes. She then explores the person of
Jesus, as well as the passion and resurrection narratives, in the
context of the synoptic gospels. Included are tasks, practice essay
titles of exam standard and activities highlighting other aspects
of human experience. Contents: * Understanding the Gospel of Luke *
Key Narratives in Luke's Gospel * The Kingdom of God in the
Parables and Miracles in Luke's Gospel * Key Themes in Luke's
Gospel * Understanding the Gospel Tradition * The Person of Jesus
in the Synoptic Gospels * The Passion and Resurrection Narratives
in the Synoptic Gospels * Synoptic Assessment: Religious Texts,
Authority and Interpretation A detailed Glossary, Bibliography and
Index are also provided.
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Matthew
(Hardcover)
Grant R Osborne; Edited by (general) Clinton E. Arnold
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R2,308
R1,913
Discovery Miles 19 130
Save R395 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Written by notable evangelical scholars, each volume in the
Zondervan Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament series treats
the literary context and structure of the passage in the original
Greek. The series consistently provides the main point, an
exegetical outline, verse-by-verse commentary, and theology in
application in each section of every commentary. Critical
scholarship informs each step but does not dominate the commentary,
allowing readers to concentrate on the biblical author s message as
it unfolds. While primarily designed for those with a basic
knowledge of biblical Greek, all who strive to understand and teach
the New Testament will find these books beneficial. The ZECNT
series covers the entire New Testament in twenty volumes; Clinton
E. Arnold serves as general editor. In this volume, Grant Osborne
offers pastors, students, and teachers a focused resource for
reading the Gospel of Matthew. Through the use of graphic
representations of translations, succinct summaries of main ideas,
exegetical outlines, and other features, Osborne presents the
Gospel of Matthew with precision and accuracy. Because of this
series focus on the textual structure of the scriptures, readers
will better understand the literary elements of Matthew, comprehend
the author s revolutionary goals, and ultimately discovering their
vital claims upon the church today."
In this installment in the New Testament Theology series, trusted
scholar Thomas Schreiner walks readers step-by-step through the
book of Revelation, considering its themes, symbolic imagery, and
historical context.
Preaching's Survey of Bibles and Bible Reference award InterVarsity
Press is proud to present The Lightfoot Legacy, a three-volume set
of previously unpublished material from J. B. Lightfoot, one of the
great biblical scholars of the modern era. In the spring of 2013,
Ben Witherington III discovered hundreds of pages of biblical
commentary by Lightfoot in the Durham Cathedral Library. While
incomplete, these commentaries represent a goldmine for historians
and biblical scholars, as well as for the many people who have
found Lightfoot's work both informative and edifying, deeply
learned and pastorally sensitive. In addition to the material on
the Acts of the Apostles, published in volume one, there were
detailed notes on the Fourth Gospel, a text that Lightfoot loved
and lectured on frequently. These pages contain his commentary
notes for John 1-12. Lightfoot had long wanted to write a
commentary on the Gospel of John, but he was unable to do so due to
more pressing demands on his time, as well as his respect for his
colleague B. F. Westcott. As a result, though he continued to
compile notes on the text, they never saw the light of day until
now. Included alongside the commentary are Lightfoot's long
out-of-print essays on the historical reliability of the Fourth
Gospel. Now on display for all to see, these commentary volumes
reveal a scholar well ahead of his time, one of the great minds of
his or any generation.
Let the wisdom of Colossians transform relationships in every area
of your life -- home, church, and even the world -- with this study
guide from renowned Bible teacher Joyce Meyer. Paul's letter to the
Colossians reminds us that as we have died with Christ, we also
need to die to our sins. It encourages us that because we have also
been raised in Him, we must submit to Jesus and adopt qualities
motivated by Christian love. In this comprehensive study tool,
Joyce Meyer's commentary on Colossians affirms the Lordship of
Christ and offers practical advice on family, relationships, and
faith.
Designed for complete beginners, and tested for years with real
learners, Complete New Testament Greek offers a bridge from the
textbook to the real world, enabling you to learn the grammar,
understand the vocabulary and ultimately how to translate the
language in which the Bible was originally written. Structured
around authentic material, placing an emphasis on the importance of
reading Biblical texts in the original, and introducing both a
grammar perspective and a full introduction to essential
vocabulary, this course also features: -21 learning units plus maps
and verb guide -Authentic materials - language taught through key
texts -Teaches the key skills - reading and understanding Greek
grammar and vocabulary -Self tests and learning activities - see
and track your own progress Rely on Teach Yourself, trusted by
language learners for over 75 years.
Join Michael Baughen in this undated 30-day devotional on 2 Timothy
as he focuses on Paul's final words. Paul is in prison, near to
death, dictating this letter to Luke for his young friend Timothy.
As he sits chained to a Roman soldier, Paul's passion for the
gospel shines out. He uses his farewell message to urge Timothy to
maintain his focus on the basics of the faith. This intensely
personal letter allows us to hear Paul's last words and ask
ourselves about the legacy that we will one day leave to others. We
learn day by day how we can benefit from the lessons to Timothy.
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Matthew
(Hardcover)
Jason K. Lee, William M. Marsh
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R1,509
Discovery Miles 15 090
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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"As they were eating, Jesus took bread, and after blessing it broke
it and gave it to the disciples, and said, 'Take, eat; this is my
body.'" How should one interpret these words of Jesus? The
sixteenth-century Reformers turned to Scripture to find the truth
of God's Word, but that doesn't mean they always agreed on how to
interpret it. For example, when approaching this passage from
Matthew's gospel, Martin Luther read it literally, for "as he says
in his own words, it is his body and his blood," but Thomas Cranmer
argued that "there must be some figure or mystery in this speech."
In this Reformation Commentary on Scripture volume, scholars Jason
K. Lee and William Marsh guide readers through a wealth of early
modern commentary on the book of Matthew. Readers will hear from
familiar voices and discover lesser-known figures from a diversity
of theological traditions, including Lutherans, Reformed, Radicals,
Anglicans and Roman Catholics. Drawing upon a variety of
resources-including commentaries, sermons, treatises, and
confessions-much of which appears here for the first time in
English, this volume provides resources for contemporary preachers,
enables scholars to better understand the depth and breadth of
Reformation commentary, and seeks to encourage all those who desire
to read the words of Scripture faithfully.
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Luke
(Paperback)
R.T. France; Series edited by Mark Strauss, John Walton
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R872
Discovery Miles 8 720
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Teach the Text Commentary Series utilizes the best of biblical
scholarship to provide the information a pastor needs to
communicate the text effectively. The carefully selected preaching
units and focused commentary allow pastors to quickly grasp the big
idea and key themes of each passage of Scripture. Each unit of the
commentary includes the big idea and key themes of the passage and
sections dedicated to understanding, teaching, and illustrating the
text.
"Le Nouveau Testament Bilingue, Francais - Anglais" est base sur la
traduction de Louis Segond 1910 et sur la traduction standard
americaine de 1901.
Les textes ont ete edites, ainsi les versets sont couplees en
francais puis, en anglais les rendant ainsi faciles a suivre et
permettant la comparaison des deux langages.
Exemples:
Jean 3:16 "Car Dieu a tant aime le monde quil a donne son Fils
unique, afin que quiconque croit en lui ne perisse point, mais quil
ait la vie eternelle."
John 3:16 "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only
begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on him should not perish,
but have eternal life."
Matthieu 28:18-20
"18. Je sus, se tant approche, leur parla ainsi: Tout pouvoir ma e
te donne dans le ciel et sur la terre.
19. Allez, faites de toutes les nations des disciples, les
baptisant au nom du Pe re, du Fils et du Saint Esprit,
20. et enseignez-leur a observer tout ce que je vous ai prescrit.
Et voici, je suis avec vous tous les jours, jusqua la fin du
monde."
Matthew 28:18-20
"18. And Jesus came to them and spake unto them, saying, All
authority hath been given unto me in heaven and on earth.
19. Go ye therefore, and make disciples of all the nations,
baptizing them into the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Spirit:
20. teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I commanded
you: and lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world."
Le couplage des versets peut produire une numerotation des versets
qui differe des Bibles standards. Des precautions doivent etre
prises quant a la comparaison de cette Bible avec d'autres Bibles.
Table des matieres:
Matthieu - Matthew
Marc - Mark
Luc - Luke
Jean - John
Actes - Acts
Romains - Romans
I Corinthiens - I Corinthians
II Corinthiens - II Corinthians
Galates - Galatians
Ephesiens - Ephesians
Philippiens - Philippians
Colossiens - Colossians
I Thessaloniciens - I Thessalonians
II Thessaloniciens - II Thessalonians
I Timothee - I Timothy
II Timothee - II Timothy
Tite - Titus
Philemon - Philemon
Hebreux - Hebrews
Jacques - James
I Pierre - I Peter
II Pierre - II Peter
I Jean - I John
II Jean - II John
III Jean - III John
Jude - Jude
Apocalypse - Revelation
This monograph demonstrates that the Fourth Gospel is a result of
highly creative, hypertextual reworking of the Acts of the
Apostles. The detailed reworking consists of around 900 strictly
sequentially organized thematic, and at times also linguistic
correspondences between John and Acts. The strictly sequential,
hypertextual dependence on Acts explains John's modifications of
the synoptic material, relocations thereof, additions to it, and
many other surprising features of the Fourth Gospel. Critical
explanations of such features, which are offered in this study,
ensure the reliability of the new solution to the problem of the
relationship between John and the Synoptics.
John and Philosophy: A New Reading of the Fourth Gospel offers a
Stoic reading of the Fourth Gospel, especially its cosmology,
epistemology, and ethics. It works through the gospel in narrative
sequence providing a 'philosophical narrative reading'. In each
section of the gospel Troels Engberg-Pedersen raises discusses
philosophical questions. He compares John with Paul (in philosophy)
and Mark (in narrative) to offer a new reading of the transmitted
text of the Fourth Gospel. Of these two profiles, the narrative one
is strongly influenced by the literary critical paradigm. Moreover,
by attending carefully to a number of narratological features, one
may come to see that the transmitted text in fact hangs together
much more coherently than scholarship has been willing to see. The
other profile is specifically philosophical. Scholarship has been
well aware that the Fourth Gospel has what one might call a
philosophical dimension. Engberg-Pedersen shows that throughout the
Gospel contemporary Stoicism, works better to illuminate the text.
This pertains to the basic cosmology (and cosmogony) that is
reflected in the text, to the epistemology that underlies a central
theme in it regarding different types of belief in Jesus, to the
ethics that is introduced fairly late in the text when Jesus
describes how the disciples should live once he has himself gone
away from them, and more.
Jesus was condemned . . . so we could be set free. He was wounded .
. . so we can be healed. He died . . . so we might have life. The
cross has lost much of its appeal as a symbol of Christianity. Yet
what Christ did at the cross remains central to our faith. In this
richly designed book, Michael Card reflects on what it means for
Christians that we meet our savior at a cross. Card combs the Old
Testament prophecies and Gospel accounts of Jesus' self-sacrifice,
seeking a renewed vision of the cross-the inconceivable meeting
place of violence and grace.
How nineteenth-century Protestant evangelicals used print and
visual media to shape American culture In nineteenth-century
America, "apocalypse" referred not to the end of the world but to
sacred revelation, and "geography" meant both the physical
landscape and its representation in printed maps, atlases, and
pictures. In Apocalyptic Geographies, Jerome Tharaud explores how
white Protestant evangelicals used print and visual media to
present the antebellum landscape as a "sacred space" of spiritual
pilgrimage, and how devotional literature influenced secular
society in important and surprising ways. Reading across genres and
media-including religious tracts and landscape paintings, domestic
fiction and missionary memoirs, slave narratives and moving
panoramas-Apocalyptic Geographies illuminates intersections of
popular culture, the physical spaces of an expanding and urbanizing
nation, and the spiritual narratives that ordinary Americans used
to orient their lives. Placing works of literature and visual
art-from Thomas Cole's The Oxbow to Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle
Tom's Cabin and Henry David Thoreau's Walden-into new contexts,
Tharaud traces the rise of evangelical media, the controversy and
backlash it engendered, and the role it played in shaping American
modernity.
THE NEW AMERICAN COMMENTARY is for the minister or Bible student
who wants to understand and expound the Scriptures. Notable
features include: * commentary based on THE NEW INTERNATIONAL
VERSION; * the NIV text printed in the body of the commentary; *
sound scholarly methodology that reflects capable research in the
original languages; * interpretation that emphasizes the
theological unity of each book and of Scripture as a whole; *
readable and applicable exposition.
This guide explores and summarizes scholarship on Philemon,
acquainting beginning students with what has been said about
Philemon, and equipping them to understand the larger debates and
conversations that surround it. It explores how different initial
scholarly assumptions result in different interpretations and
"meanings;" these meanings always have ethical implications.
Reading Philemon challenges us to rethink the process of commentary
and the communities interpretation creates. Though only one chapter
long, Paul's Letter to Philemon has generated a remarkable amount
of commentary and scholarship over the centuries, figuring in
debates over textual reconstruction, the formation of biblical
canon, the culture of ancient Rome, Greek language and its
translation, and the role of the Bible in Western politics and
economics. The focus of this short letter is labor, love and
captivity. Tradition since Chrysostom has argued the letter is an
appeal to Philemon on behalf of a fugitive slave Onesimus, now a
convert to Christianity. Yet this interpretation depends upon
several assumptions and reconstructions. Other equally plausible
contexts could be -- and have been -- argued.
Published jointly with Essential Christian, parent body for Spring
Harvest.
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