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F. F. Bruce commented on the first edition, "I am glad to give it
my warm commendation. As an introduction to the criticism of the
New Testament it has . . . no equal in English." Since Bruce's
comments on the original edition thirty years ago, this clear and
comprehensive introduction to New Testament textual criticism has
remained a popular text for beginning and intermediate students.
Diagrams, an appendix of Latin terms, supplementary readings, a
bibliography, and an index make this revised edition an invaluable
resource.
Each volume in the Exegetical Summaries series works through the
original text phrase by phrase. English equivalents are provided
for all Hebrew and Greek words, making this an excellent reference
for exegetes of all levels. Questions that occur to exegetes as
they study the text are stated and then answered by summarizing the
ways many scholars have interpreted the text. This information
should help translators or students in making their own exegetical
decisions. As a basis for discussion, a semi-literal translation of
the text is given. The first question to be answered is the meaning
of key words in context. Information from standard lexicons is
given and then translations of the word are cited from a dozen
major Bible versions and from commentaries that offer their own
translations of the text. Questions about the grammar and discourse
structure of the original languages are answered by summarizing the
views of many commentators. When exegetical disagreements appear in
the commentaries and versions, the various interpretations are
listed. This book is not intended to replace the commentaries that
are consulted. Rather than being a stand-alone commentary, this
book summarizes many important details of exegesis that should be
considered in studying the biblical text. Dr. Harold Greenlee,
Ph.D. in Biblical and Patristic Greek (Harvard), has worked as a
teacher and Greek exegetical consultant for many years with both
OMS International and SIL International. He has written numerous
books and articles, including five volumes in the Exegetical
Summary series.
Each volume in the Exegetical Summaries series works through the
original text phrase by phrase. English equivalents are provided
for all Hebrew and Greek words, making this an excellent reference
for exegetes of all levels. Questions that occur to exegetes as
they study the text are stated and then answered by summarizing the
ways many scholars have interpreted the text. This information
should help translators or students in making their own exegetical
decisions. As a basis for discussion, a semi-literal translation of
the text is given. The first question to be answered is the meaning
of key words in context. Information from standard lexicons is
given and then translations of the word are cited from a dozen
major Bible versions and from commentaries that offer their own
translations of the text. Questions about the grammar and discourse
structure of the original languages are answered by summarizing the
views of many commentators. When exegetical disagreements appear in
the commentaries and versions, the various interpretations are
listed. This book is not intended to replace the commentaries that
are consulted. Rather than being a stand-alone commentary, this
book summarizes many important details of exegesis that should be
considered in studying the biblical text. Dr. Harold Greenlee,
Ph.D. in Biblical and Patristic Greek (Harvard), has worked as a
teacher and Greek exegetical consultant for many years with both
OMS International and SIL International. He has written numerous
books and articles, including five volumes in the Exegetical
Summary series.
Each volume in the Exegetical Summaries series works through the
original text phrase by phrase. English equivalents are provided
for all Hebrew and Greek words, making this an excellent reference
for exegetes of all levels. Questions that occur to exegetes as
they study the text are stated and then answered by summarizing the
ways many scholars have interpreted the text. This information
should help translators or students in making their own exegetical
decisions. As a basis for discussion, a semi-literal translation of
the text is given. The first question to be answered is the meaning
of key words in context. Information from standard lexicons is
given and then translations of the word are cited from a dozen
major Bible versions and from commentaries that offer their own
translations of the text. Questions about the grammar and discourse
structure of the original languages are answered by summarizing the
views of many commentators. When exegetical disagreements appear in
the commentaries and versions, the various interpretations are
listed. This book is not intended to replace the commentaries that
are consulted. Rather than being a stand-alone commentary, this
book summarizes many important details of exegesis that should be
considered in studying the biblical text. Dr. Harold Greenlee,
Ph.D. in Biblical and Patristic Greek (Harvard), has worked as a
teacher and Greek exegetical consultant for many years with both
OMS International and SIL International. He has written numerous
books and articles, including five volumes in the Exegetical
Summary series.
Each volume in the Exegetical Summaries series works through the
original text phrase by phrase. English equivalents are provided
for all Hebrew and Greek words, making this an excellent reference
for exegetes of all levels. Questions that occur to exegetes as
they study the text are stated and then answered by summarizing the
ways many scholars have interpreted the text. This information
should help translators or students in making their own exegetical
decisions. As a basis for discussion, a semi-literal translation of
the text is given. The first question to be answered is the meaning
of key words in context. Information from standard lexicons is
given and then translations of the word are cited from a dozen
major Bible versions and from commentaries that offer their own
translations of the text. Questions about the grammar and discourse
structure of the original languages are answered by summarizing the
views of many commentators. When exegetical disagreements appear in
the commentaries and versions, the various interpretations are
listed. This book is not intended to replace the commentaries that
are consulted. Rather than being a stand-alone commentary, this
book summarizes many important details of exegesis that should be
considered in studying the biblical text. Dr. Harold Greenlee,
Ph.D. in Biblical and Patristic Greek (Harvard), has worked as a
teacher and Greek exegetical consultant for many years with both
OMS International and SIL International. He has written numerous
books and articles, including five volumes in the Exegetical
Summary series.
Each volume in the Exegetical Summaries series works through the
original text phrase by phrase. English equivalents are provided
for all Hebrew and Greek words, making this an excellent reference
for exegetes of all levels. Questions that occur to exegetes as
they study the text are stated and then answered by summarizing the
ways many scholars have interpreted the text. This information
should help translators or students in making their own exegetical
decisions. As a basis for discussion, a semi-literal translation of
the text is given. The first question to be answered is the meaning
of key words in context. Information from standard lexicons is
given and then translations of the word are cited from a dozen
major Bible versions and from commentaries that offer their own
translations of the text. Questions about the grammar and discourse
structure of the original languages are answered by summarizing the
views of many commentators. When exegetical disagreements appear in
the commentaries and versions, the various interpretations are
listed. This book is not intended to replace the commentaries that
are consulted. Rather than being a stand-alone commentary, this
book summarizes many important details of exegesis that should be
considered in studying the biblical text. Dr. Harold Greenlee,
Ph.D. in Biblical and Patristic Greek (Harvard), has worked as a
teacher and Greek exegetical consultant for many years with both
OMS International and SIL International. He has written numerous
books and articles, including five volumes in the Exegetical
Summary series.
This book is a systematic and complete presentation of the
morphemes of all the words found in the second edition of the
classic standard lexicon by Bauer-Arndt-Gingrich-Danker, " A
Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early
Christian Literature."
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