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| Alphabetical [« »] nets 2 neutestamentliche 1 never 21 new 139 newly 3 news 4 next 13 | Frequency [« »] 142 letter 141 paul 140 there 139 new 139 rome 139 works 138 all | Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances new |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pref | Preface.~To many, the New Testament appears as an 2 Pref | it is the beginning of a new continent of literature 3 Pref | literature escapes them. Yet the New Testament was the source 4 Pref | dominated the ancient scene.~The New Testament was really the 5 Pref | also directly out of the New Testament. Its first literary 6 Pref | gospels, and acts of the New Testament. There was something 7 Pref | never be understood from the New Testament alone. Early Christian 8 Pref | course of those years. But new discoveries in recent years 9 1,2 | survive in the gospels, but New Testament study is not yet 10 1,3 | and the earliest gospels a new and extraordinary force 11 1,4 | Heresies”). He begins a new period in Christian literature 12 1,4 | unequal but moderate size: the New Testament, the Apostolic 13 1,4 | Fathers overlap some of the New Testament books in date, 14 1,4 | to the later books of the New Testament. In purpose, too, 15 1,4 | apologetic materials in the New Testament as well as in 16 1,4 | books that we find in the New Testament-letters, apocalypses, 17 1,6 | literature and go directly to the New Testament, as though it 18 1,6 | was in the books of the New Testament and in the earliest 19 1,6 | with the writing of the New Testament, and although 20 1,6 | after its formation made the New Testament the religious 21 1,6 | acceptance of the gospel released new powers in the human spirit, 22 1,6 | literary battle for the new faith. It was an age of 23 1,6 | modern reader and give him a new idea of the intelligence 24 1,6 | books not included in the New Testament may well be older 25 1,6 | church. But the story of the New Testament books has often 26 1,6 | to introductions to the New Testament that emphasize 27 1,6 | historical circumstances of the New Testament books. In the 28 1,6 | been said in print about New Testament origins.~ ~ ~ 29 2,2 | it passed into some early New Testaments, such as the 30 2,2 | Syriac manuscript of the New Testament in the Harclean 31 2,2 | it is easy to see how the new regard for church officers 32 2,2 | almost won a place in the New Testament. It was accepted 33 2,2 | mentioned as part of the New Testament in the Apostolic 34 2,2 | Paul in the Harclean Syriac New Testament manuscript already 35 2,2 | Clement as belonging to the New Testament. But on the Greek 36 2,2 | apocrypha.” But, in or out the New Testament, I Clement is 37 2,4 | earliest writing outside of the New Testament that we possess.~ 38 2,4 | A.D. 367, omits it from the New Testament but says that 39 2,4 | of Hermas” may be read by new converts and persons preparing 40 2,7 | in mind in creating this new collection by the soon-to-be-martyred 41 2,8 | ordered the building of the new city. The literary environment 42 2,8 | manuscript includes it in the New Testament, putting it after 43 2,9 | all the apostles was not new and had been taken up in 44 2,11| Martyrdom of Justin begins a new form of Christian literature 45 3 | shepherd gives Hernias a new series of twelve commandments, 46 3 | than one early form of the New Testament and, translated 47 3 | stood at the end of the New Testament in the Sinaitic 48 3 | Athanasius excluded it from the New Testament but recommended 49 3 | it for private reading by new converts.~ The Shepherd 50 3 | Michigan papyrus throws new light upon the literary 51 3 | than any single book in the New Testament.~ It has been 52 3 | section of the Ethiopic New Testament.~ Although the 53 3 | form an appendix to the New Testament in Ethiopic manuscripts 54 3 | part in the production of new revelations. The most important 55 4,1 | gospel inside or outside the New Testament was directly or 56 4,2 | doubt or opposition that the new gospel might encounter by 57 4,2 | well be suspicious of the new, unfamiliar material another 58 4,2 | the door was still open to new gospel narratives. Certainly 59 4,2 | soon undertook to write new gospels, and none of them 60 4,4 | the vine until he drank it new in the kingdom, so James 61 4,5 | Jews, but there is little new material.~ Jesus, while 62 4,6 | combining with them some new units, either remnants of 63 4,6 | found their way to Egypt, or new products of Christian reflection. 64 4,6 | into one, hesitated to add new elements of lesson or story, 65 4,6 | embellished his narrative with new details in the old stories 66 4,6 | even added some altogether new stories. Since no one had 67 4,6 | to be tampered with, the new gospel writer had no inhibitions 68 4,6 | with any of the numerous new gospels mentioned by early 69 4,6 | hesitate to introduce some new material. There is very 70 4,8 | Acts or anywhere in the New Testament, but sometime 71 4,10| from its view that Old and New Testament personages who 72 4,10| codices according to the new numbering system.~ ~ 73 4,11| reflections of most of the New Testament books, including 74 4,11| confirms the existence of a New Testament collection at 75 5,2 | books whose place in the New Testament was denied in 76 5,2 | included in Efrem's Syriac New Testament in the fourth 77 5,3 | lives to teach others her new faith. Paul approves her 78 5,3 | the stadium, just as the new Greek portions describe 79 5,8 | his famous chapter on the New Testament canon (Church 80 6 | writings like those in the New Testament or those intended 81 6,1 | Alexandrinus, after the New Testament and the two Letters 82 6,1 | closing of the Psalter turned new song writers to Solomon, 83 6,1 | fragmentary hymns of the New Testament (for example, 84 6,2 | examples are imbedded in New Testament writings, especially 85 7 | individual character as a new faith, competing with various 86 7 | dialogues in defense of the new religion.~ Christians were 87 7,1 | Christians worshiped God in a new way and, in contrast with 88 7,3 | addressed a defense of the new faith to the emperor Antoninus, 89 7,3 | sees in the Christians a new race, as the author of the 90 8,1 | too, we should welcome new manuscripts of his works, 91 8,3 | concerned with exegesis of the New Testament, as we learn from 92 8,3 | appearance of the Peshitto New Testament in A.D. 411. Tatian 93 9,1 | between A.D. 167 and 190.~ The new use of Greek rhetoric made 94 10,1 | To imagine that something new was created toward the end 95 10,2 | what we understand by the New Testament, at least in its 96 10,3 | grounds for them. It gives new evidence of Irenaeus' debt 97 12,1 | become in his demands for new books that Origen once humorously 98 12,3 | every book of the Old and New Testaments. This ranged 99 12,3 | been lost) and 130 for the New. But, of these, only 21 100 12,3 | Testament, and 114 for the New, or 291 in all; of these, 101 12,7 | New Testament.~ Especial interest 102 12,7 | interest attaches to Origen's New Testament. He was fully 103 12,7 | should be included in the New Testament; and, in view 104 12,7 | thought belonged to the New Testament into two classes, 105 12,7 | accepted as belonging to the New Testament, were James, II 106 12,7 | revelations, John and Hermas. This New Testament of twenty-nine 107 13,7 | confessors, widows, virgins, new converts, crafts forbidden 108 13,8 | New Testament.~ Hippolytus is 109 13,8 | for his testimony, to the New Testament as understood 110 13,8 | day. He gores no list of New Testament books (unless, 111 13,8 | fairly clear picture. His New Testament was not particularly 112 13,8 | Revelation of John completed his New Testament, making a total 113 13,10| Alexandria in 261, but a new series of calamities soon 114 13,10| Dionysius died, A.D. 264-65. The new bishop of Antioch, Paul 115 13,13| on books of the Old and New Testaments. According to 116 14,7 | Like Irenaeus, he had a New Testament, and these two 117 14,10| with representatives of the new faith, especiall with presbyter 118 14,10| revived. Cornelius, the new bishop of Rome, was banished 119 14,10| that they should, but the new Roman bishop Stephen (254- 120 14,10| the persecution under the new emperor Valerian (A.D. 253- 121 14,10| bishops simply organized new churches, in the places 122 14,10| later Valerian issued a new and much sterner edict. 123 14,14| His new Testament.~ Cyprian's New 124 14,14| new Testament.~ Cyprian's New Testament is clearly reflected 125 14,14| John. As compared with the New Testament of Tertullian' 126 14,14| still clung to the short New Testament, without Hebrews 127 14,19| and 6:3, presupposes the new edict of toleration issued 128 14,19| a third) longer than the New Testament. Some idea of 129 14,20| the inclusion of some y new material as well.~ Harnack 130 15 | his predecessors. Like the New Testament and the Old, early 131 15,3 | the disputed books” of the New Testament “and what they 132 15,4 | Heraclides, as well as the new Gnostic library from Nag 133 16 | Grant, Gnosticism (London, New York, ig6i), i43-q4, I84-90.~ ~ [ 134 16 | Egyptian Gnostics (London, New York, 1960).~ [22] “Les 135 16 | According to Philip (London, New York 1963).~ [24] Die gnostischen 136 16 | Fathers, 2nd ed., London and New York 1893, pp. 488-89.~ [ 137 16 | A.C. McGiffert, Eusebius, New York, 1890, p. 259.~ [68] 138 16 | Grant, The Formation of the New Testament, London and New 139 16 | New Testament, London and New York, 1965, pp. 164-69.~ [