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  • ...'''''Nea''''' ). (See [[Gospel]] [[Canon; Bible]] on other aspects of New Testament) Tregelles (Horne, 106) exhibits "the genealogy of the text" thus. The manu ...e Complutensian text. </p> <p> ''The Editions Of Beta And Elzevir.'' - The Greek text of Beta, (dedicated to [[Queen]] Elizabeth), was printed by H. Stephen
    125 KB (19,941 words) - 11:25, 15 October 2021
  • Text And Manuscripts Of The New Testament <ref name="term_9172" /> ...n </i> , Cambridge and London, 1896; Th. Zahn, <i> Introduction to the New Testament </i> , English translation, Edinburgh, 1910. </p>
    47 KB (7,772 words) - 08:27, 15 October 2021
  • {{short description|Handwritten copy of the Bible in Greek}} {{New Testament manuscript infobox
    66 KB (9,278 words) - 11:29, 11 October 2021
  • == Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_57378" /> == ..., χάρις). But many others have gained, or at least advanced towards, their new meaning by contact with Hebrew thought. The following are among the more im
    103 KB (16,641 words) - 08:18, 15 October 2021
  • ...storical Jesus </i> ): A. S. Peake, <i> A Critical Introduction to the New Testament </i> . </p>
    41 KB (6,686 words) - 15:03, 16 October 2021
  • ...This last title was only given (as here) to a board of magistrates in <em> Greek </em> cities of the East; in Roman colonies in Italy the name was given to ...Jews from Rome under Claudius Ceasar, A.D. 52. </p> <p> No book of the New Testament has suffered more from variations of text. Probably these are due to attemp
    160 KB (26,780 words) - 14:20, 16 October 2021
  • Text Of The New Testament <ref name="term_54414" /> ...to some extent based on the Old Syriac, but was assimilated to the type of Greek text then current, completely superseded its predecessors, and from this po
    36 KB (6,026 words) - 00:05, 13 October 2021
  • ...te. There are in existence over five thousand manuscripts of the Greek New Testament (in part or in whole), and although these increase the number of variations == Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_56593" /> ==
    52 KB (8,183 words) - 10:08, 13 October 2021
  • == Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_54937" /> == ...Alexander’s [[Empire]] </i> , London, 1888, and <i> The Silver Age of the Greek World </i> , do. 1906; T. Mommsen, <i> Prov. of Rom </i> . <i> Emp </i> .2,
    79 KB (12,736 words) - 14:23, 16 October 2021
  • ...g. the Deuteronomy, Jonah; Acts papyrus, 1912 (compare the <i> Sahidic New Testament </i> , Oxford, 1911). </p> <p> Arabic papyri first began to appear from Egy
    26 KB (4,049 words) - 10:59, 13 October 2021
  • ...more weight to its evidence than is at present the case. The main mass of uncials that have not been here mentioned, and of the minuscules, may be regarded a ...xt+of+the+gospels Text Of The Gospels from Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament]</ref>
    54 KB (9,148 words) - 00:14, 13 October 2021
  • == Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_56163" /> == ...Synagogue, iii. p. 41 f. (Jan. 1901).] A Hebraized form (הִמְנוֹן) of the Greek term ὑμνος occurs in the [[Midrash]] (cf. <i> Ber. Rabba </i> viii. 9
    44 KB (6,816 words) - 13:51, 14 October 2021
  • ...se in that city) which John Presbyter and [[Irenaeus]] endorse. In the New Testament record of Paul's labors in and for Rome no allusion occurs to Peter in conn ...db </i> ) and others regard "quibus tamen" as a literal translation of the Greek οἶς δὲ , <i> ''''' hoı́s ''''' </i> <i> ''''' dé ''''' </i> , and
    58 KB (9,282 words) - 08:05, 15 October 2021
  • ...); Wright, <i> Synopsis of the Gospels and his Gospel according to Luke in Greek </i> (1900). </p>
    39 KB (6,687 words) - 15:28, 16 October 2021
  • ...ntain but the Books of Maccabees (1,2). But 3 Maccabees has a place in two uncials of the [[Septuagint]] (A and V) and also in the ancient (Peshitta) Syriac v
    57 KB (9,235 words) - 08:05, 15 October 2021
  • == Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_57303" /> == ...can itself bear the meaning ‘a drop of blood,’ and is so used in classical Greek writers (see aesch. <i> Eum. </i> 184; Plato, <i> Crit. </i> 120 A). [[Tati
    24 KB (3,861 words) - 14:01, 14 October 2021
  • ...cal'' and ''Apocryphal'' afterwards disappeared, to a great extent, in the Greek Church, as is seen from the fact that Bar-Hebraeus places Tobit among the s ...hr. The text of Codex Vaticanus and Codex Alexandrinus says Lohr, contains Greek of the most idiomatic kind, and gives no suggestion of being a translation.
    72 KB (11,795 words) - 08:26, 15 October 2021
  • ...y; now, a man does not become at one and the same moment the adherent of a new religion and its great reformer’ ( <em> ib. </em> col. 4138). Of this dis ...ted into Christ, so that he acquires all the nourishment and vigour of the new stock. Thus he is led into the consciousness of all that is involved in the
    73 KB (12,822 words) - 08:16, 15 October 2021
  • ...cted'' (ed. 1815), 1, 60 sq.; Whiston, ''Sacred History Of The Old And New Testament,'' 1 '','' 202; Reuss, in Ersch und Gruber's ''Encyklopadie,'' sec. 2, vol. ...he medieval Christian church. </p> Literature. <p> For the editions of the Greek text and for commentaries on the Apocrypha, see under Apocryphal Literature
    58 KB (9,399 words) - 08:01, 15 October 2021
  • ...Tischendorf. </p> <p> '''G,''' (of the Epistles), ''Cod. Boernerianus,'' a Greek-Latin MS. of Paul's Epistles, now in the [[Royal]] Library of Dresden. It h
    32 KB (5,399 words) - 11:09, 15 October 2021

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