In tackling the New Testament texts a certain abandon and lack of refinement is imperative.
The reader of the Greek obviously enjoys many advantages. He can apprreciate differences in style and liiterary qqality.
This edition of The Pastor's Bible Study is the third in an exciting and successfull series projected for ten or more volumes.
The versatility of this resource allows you to plan according to a canonical, lectionary, or thematic structure.
In response to the needs of hardworking pastors, and bolstered by through research about the practices of congregations, Abingdon Press envisioned a new tool for supporting pastors in their ministry.
This standard commentary on the books of the Old and New Testaments is now being issued in paperback for the first time, with sme of the volumes being revised and replaced.
The book commences with a brief prologue, stating its origin and conveying the writer's customary greeting, together with a doxology to Christ and two prophetic sayings which announce the theme of the book.
In this third volume are exemplar of Barr's sustained linguistic work on the languages of the bible and the surrounding world.
The fInal section (Part VI) in this volume consits of some writings on the history of scolarship, with nbiographies of a number of major names in the discipline of biblical studies.
The Bible is divided into two parts-the Old Testament and The New Testament.