Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
literally 2
literary 69
literatur 1
literature 89
literature-and 1
literatures 1
litteratur 1
Frequency    [«  »]
91 christianity
90 alexandria
89 christians
89 literature
89 than
88 2
88 gospels
Edgar J. Goodspeed
History of early christian literature

IntraText - Concordances

literature

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pref | as an island of religious literature in an ancient sea. That 2 Pref | beginning of a new continent of literature escapes them. Yet the New 3 Pref | generations gave Christianity a literature that in sheer bulk and vigor 4 Pref | five hundred years. This literature sprang not only out of Christian 5 Pref | forgotten.~Much of this literature has perished, although the 6 Pref | the history of Christian literature as well as of Christian 7 Pref | book on early Christian literature.~And then there is Photius, 8 Pref | recovery of early Christian literature. For it seems that, when 9 Pref | Testament alone. Early Christian literature is an indispensable aid 10 Pref | students of early Christian literature there, in the course of 11 Pref | works of early Christian literature that are still conspicuously 12 1 | Early Christian Literature.~ ~ 13 1,1 | no thought of producing a literature; indeed, during the first 14 1,1 | explain in the light of the literature produced by other Jewish 15 1,2 | of the story of Christian literature, the work of the evangelists 16 1,3 | although at first the Christian literature of these languages consisted 17 1,4 | Organization of the Literature.~This voluminous literature 18 1,4 | Literature.~This voluminous literature breaks conveniently for 19 1,4 | so colored the subsequent literature that it can hardly be mistaken; 20 1,4 | history of early Christian literature as well as of the march 21 1,4 | student of early Christian literature than the “Church History” 22 1,4 | convenient break in the literature of these first three Christian 23 1,4 | new period in Christian literature because with him the self-consciously 24 1,4 | this earliest Christian literature before Irenaeus reproduced 25 1,5 | not solved. The earlier literature can be grouped according 26 1,5 | arrangement by types of literatureapologies, antiheretical 27 1,6 | variety, and vigor of this literature must be realized if we are 28 1,6 | inclined to pass by all this literature and go directly to the New 29 1,6 | contemporary and later Christian literature. And it is true that it 30 2,2 | Hebrews reflected in Christian literature, for Clement is largely 31 2,2 | account of Christian Arabic literature, speaks of the two letters 32 2,3 | books of early Christian literature — until 1875 I Clement was 33 2,5 | what was to be Christian literature.~ ~ 34 2,6 | in his use of Christian literature does Polycarp stand apart 35 2,6 | Peter, and uses Christian literature much more frequently than 36 2,7 | down to us of that type of literature, the “martyrdom,” which 37 2,7 | development of Christian letter literature.~ ~ ~ 38 2,11| a new form of Christian literature that became immensely popular, 39 2,11| the beginning of the great literature of martyrology.~ ~ 40 2,12| classics of martyrological literature. Eusebius included it in 41 3 | thus adopted into Christian literature.~ But, in general, Jewish 42 3 | was influenced by Greek literature as well as Jewish.~ Sometime 43 3 | and hell into Christian literature. The Orphic and Pythagorean 44 3 | study of early Christian literature.~ The Sibyl of Cumae (or 45 3 | the progress of Christian literature.~ Gnostic writers, naturally 46 4,1 | fact about the whole gospel literature.~ ~ 47 4,2 | the pattern for the Acts literature that was to come. The collection 48 4,2 | the gospel as a type of literature, and it seemed almost to 49 4,4 | upon the gospel type of literature and created a written gospel 50 4,10| being used (I8:2-I9:I); but literature produced by non-literary 51 4,10| Christian or pseudo-Christian literature in modern times. In 1945- 52 5,1 | creation of the apocryphal Acts literature and gave it its name.~ ~ 53 5,4 | notable part in popular literature and Christian art; painters 54 5,5 | considerable body of apocryphal literature had already gathered about 55 5,6 | developed some Christian Syriac literature with his poems. Whether 56 6 | and Exegesis.~Most of the literature with which we have thus 57 6 | particular occasions. From this literature it is difficult to get much 58 6,3 | of Christian history and literature. A long list of Christian 59 7 | the Christian apologetic literature that soon took shape in 60 8,2 | identified in Christian literature. The text is broken at two 61 8,4 | about the controversial literature he provoked.~ Marcion's 62 9,1 | phase of early Christian literature, the finding of the whole 63 9,2 | is better versed in Greek literature and thought than his predecessors 64 9,2 | predecessors in Christian literature. He writes earnestly and 65 9,3 | of familiarity with Greek literature, quoting numbers of poets 66 10,3 | study of early Christian literature to find any one of the works 67 10,4 | book of early Christian literature that would be more warmly 68 12,3 | every field of Christian literature. Besides pioneering in the 69 13,9 | questions in pagan and Christian literature alike.~ ~ 70 13,11| works of early Christian literature not only the bulk of his 71 14,1 | century the writing of Latin literature was already passing into 72 14,3 | contribution to Christian defense literature, and they are powerful reinforcements 73 14,7 | also knew early Christian literature very well, espe. cially 74 14,9 | field of early Christian literature has been more hotly debated 75 14,17| better work of Christian literature has fared even worse, as 76 15 | Eusebius and Early Christian Literature.~The literature we have 77 15 | Christian Literature.~The literature we have been discussing 78 15 | the Old, early Christian literature consists of a little library 79 15,2 | collection of early Christian literature as could be obtained. Eusebius 80 15,3 | history of early Christian literature than a real history either 81 15,3 | the meadows of Christian literature (thus producing a “florilegium” 82 15,4 | information about early Christian literature to Eusebius we might owe 83 15,4 | study of early Christian literature has a significant future, 84 15,4 | The relation of Christian literature to the non-Christian literature 85 15,4 | literature to the non-Christian literature of the time remains to be 86 16 | Books of Early Christian Literature.~With the conversion of 87 16 | of the movement and the literature, the heroic period, which 88 16 | either pagan or Christian literature, both of which suffered 89 16 | tragic losses early Christian literature has sustained. But let us


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License