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This Is A New Release Of The Original 1910 Edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1905 Edition. Together With
The Greek Rites Of Baptism And Epiphany.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1910 Edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1905 Edition. Together With
The Greek Rites Of Baptism And Epiphany.
1905. This Armenian lectionary (a lesson or selection, especially
of Scripture, read in divine service) is one reconstructed by
Conybeare from lectionary manuscripts and from a commentary on the
lectionary by (as Conybeare supposed) Gregory Asharuni. It contains
the rites of Epiphany, of Baptism, and of Animal Sacrifice
exemplified not only from Armenian MSS., but from Greek and, in the
case of the first, from Nestorian as well. See other titles by this
author available from Kessinger Publishing.
1910. Conybeare, a distinguished Oxford philologist, has developed
sketches of a movement of thought conducted by a few prominent
scholars and critics. He has singled out courageous writers who,
besides being learned, were ready to face obloquy and unpopularity;
for, unhappily, in the domain of Biblical criticism it is difficult
to please the majority of readers without being apologetic in tone
and goody-goody. Contents: Ancient Exegesis; The Harmonists; The
Deists; The Evangelists; Textual Criticism; Some Pioneers; Foreign
Work; English Work; and The Modernists. See other titles by this
author available from Kessinger Publishing.
1910. A study of Christian origins. In an age when old faiths are
loosening their hold on us and new superstitions, like
spiritualism, occultism and Christian Science, threaten to imprison
our minds afresh, to inquire carefully who Jesus of Nazareth was,
what were his real aims and ideas, what were the means at his
command for realizing them, how the great institutions connected
with his name originated and grew up. This is what Conybeare aimed
to do in this book in as simple and straightforward a manner as
possible, without ambiguity, but also without sarcasm or mockery.
1910. A study of Christian origins. In an age when old faiths are
loosening their hold on us and new superstitions, like
spiritualism, occultism and Christian Science, threaten to imprison
our minds afresh, to inquire carefully who Jesus of Nazareth was,
what were his real aims and ideas, what were the means at his
command for realizing them, how the great institutions connected
with his name originated and grew up. This is what Conybeare aimed
to do in this book in as simple and straightforward a manner as
possible, without ambiguity, but also without sarcasm or mockery.
1905. This Armenian lectionary (a lesson or selection, especially
of Scripture, read in divine service) is one reconstructed by
Conybeare from lectionary manuscripts and from a commentary on the
lectionary by (as Conybeare supposed) Gregory Asharuni. It contains
the rites of Epiphany, of Baptism, and of Animal Sacrifice
exemplified not only from Armenian MSS., but from Greek and, in the
case of the first, from Nestorian as well. See other titles by this
author available from Kessinger Publishing.
1905. This Armenian lectionary (a lesson or selection, especially
of Scripture, read in divine service) is one reconstructed by
Conybeare from lectionary manuscripts and from a commentary on the
lectionary by (as Conybeare supposed) Gregory Asharuni. It contains
the rites of Epiphany, of Baptism, and of Animal Sacrifice
exemplified not only from Armenian MSS., but from Greek and, in the
case of the first, from Nestorian as well. See other titles by this
author available from Kessinger Publishing.
1910. Conybeare, a distinguished Oxford philologist, has developed
sketches of a movement of thought conducted by a few prominent
scholars and critics. He has singled out courageous writers who,
besides being learned, were ready to face obloquy and unpopularity;
for, unhappily, in the domain of Biblical criticism it is difficult
to please the majority of readers without being apologetic in tone
and goody-goody. Contents: Ancient Exegesis; The Harmonists; The
Deists; The Evangelists; Textual Criticism; Some Pioneers; Foreign
Work; English Work; and The Modernists. See other titles by this
author available from Kessinger Publishing.
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