Reading the New Testament Today: An Introduction to New Testament StudyJohn Knox Press, 1978 - 164 pagini |
Din interiorul cărții
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Pagina 114
... historical truth about him are not necessarily the same thing , and for nearly two hundred years a major concern of critical scholarship has been the effort to establish what that historical truth was - the so - called ' quest of the ...
... historical truth about him are not necessarily the same thing , and for nearly two hundred years a major concern of critical scholarship has been the effort to establish what that historical truth was - the so - called ' quest of the ...
Pagina 115
... historical Jesus was like , we are free to keep our faith in the exalted Lord , undisturbed by historical doubts of any kind . Many however will feel that the price is too high . Can we really say that the historical truth about Jesus ...
... historical Jesus was like , we are free to keep our faith in the exalted Lord , undisturbed by historical doubts of any kind . Many however will feel that the price is too high . Can we really say that the historical truth about Jesus ...
Pagina 123
... historical study . He must deal with Jesus as a human being , and leave faith to build on the foundations in whatever way it can . He can assess the strength of the historical traditions of the virgin birth , the resurrection or Jesus ...
... historical study . He must deal with Jesus as a human being , and leave faith to build on the foundations in whatever way it can . He can assess the strength of the historical traditions of the virgin birth , the resurrection or Jesus ...
Cuprins
Introduction | 1 |
Asking Questions | 5 |
The Original Wording | 16 |
Drept de autor | |
12 alte secțiuni nu sunt arătate
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Reading the New Testament Today: An Introduction to New Testament Study Brian E. Beck Previzualizare limitată - 1977 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
accept Acts actually alternative ancient answer appear approach argued assume attempt authority beginning Bible biblical Canon century chapter Christian church common concerned contain contents continued course criticism difficulties disciples documents early English evidence example expect express fact faith follow further give given gospels Greek hand historical ideas important included interpretation Jesus Jewish John kingdom known language later less letters Lord's Luke manuscripts Mark material Matthew Matthew and Luke meaning ment MICHIGAN narrative nature never Old Testament oral original parable particular passages Paul period Peter possible prayer preaching precise present probably problem question readers reason reference regard Romans sayings scholars scholarship Scripture seen similar sources Spirit story suggested teaching theory tion tradition translation understanding UNIVERSITY verses writers written