Bible Review
Bible Review opens the realm of Biblical scholarship to a non-academic audience. World-renown scholars detail the latest in Biblical interpretation and why it matters. These important pieces are paired with stunning art, which makes the text come to life before your eyes. Anyone interested in the Bible should read this seminal magazine.
Endnote 13 - The Dead Sea Scrolls and Early Christianity: Part One
Endnote 12 - The Dead Sea Scrolls and Early Christianity: Part One
Endnote 11 - The Dead Sea Scrolls and Early Christianity: Part One
Endnote 10 - The Dead Sea Scrolls and Early Christianity: Part One
The Scrolls and the New Testament, ed. Krister Stendhal (New York: Harper & Row, 1957). All of the papers except two (and Stendahl’s introduction) had already been published between 1950 and 1955. Actually, two of the essays are not centrally about Qumran and the New Testament: Joseph Fitzmyer’s on the Ebionites (though he was responding to J.L. Teicher’s claim that the Qumran sect was Ebionite—a Jewish Christian group) and Nahum Glatzer’s on Hillel the Elder.
Endnote 9 - The Dead Sea Scrolls and Early Christianity: Part One
Endnote 8 - The Dead Sea Scrolls and Early Christianity: Part One
Endnote 7 - The Dead Sea Scrolls and Early Christianity: Part One
Endnote 6 - The Dead Sea Scrolls and Early Christianity: Part One
Endnote 5 - The Dead Sea Scrolls and Early Christianity: Part One
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