This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the di…
This is a fairly brief work by the late professor of New Testament at Westminster Seminary. In it, Ned Stonehouse discusses such issues as authorship of the Synoptics, the question of order and ind…
It is not only appropriate but necessary that the prefatory words in any book about the love command in the New Testament should be words of acknoledgment. The topic itself is so vast and it touche…
This revolutionary and highly literate book challenges one of the basic assumptions shared by almost all New Testament scholars for the past hundred years-the belief that Mark is the earliest and m…
A masterfully drawn picture of the debate and controversy that has surrounded the Gospel of Thomas since its discovery in 1945. Stephen Patterson concludes that this collection of sayings is not a …
This is a book in six parts. After a provocative introduction that forewarns the reader that major revisionism and criticism lie ahead, Arnal provides five chapters each of which is capable of bein…
In his preface the author wrote: thius book is an attempt to deal with the synoptic gospels not as collections of anecdots but as compilations of sources underlying Mark and the hypothetical Q, and…
In his preface the author wrote: thius book is an attempt to deal with the synoptic gospels not as collections of anecdots but as compilations of sources underlying Mark and the hypothetical Q, and…
The first gospel was not one of the four canonical gospels. It was probably Q, an early collection of Jesus' sayings used by Matthew and Luke to create their gospels. Q does not mention Jesus' deat…
In his prologue to the New Testament, the English Reformer William Tyndale movingly wrote: Euagelio is a greke worde, and signyfyth good, nery, glad and joyfull tydings, taht maketh a mannes hert g…