How New Is the New Testament, by Donald Hagner
As “thoroughly concise” (oxymoron?) a treatment of the relationship between the New and Old Testaments as one can find today.
We’ll e-mail you a weekly Greek paradigm with instruction and translation exercises.
We’ll e-mail you five lessons in difficult Greek texts to push your language skills.
As “thoroughly concise” (oxymoron?) a treatment of the relationship between the New and Old Testaments as one can find today.
Three heresies and several biblical falsehoods are far too prominent among Evangelicals. We need to do better.
If these comparisons are valid, then we do not have a writing that omits the Third Person of the Trinity.
“If we miss Jesus’ life and the kind of man He was, we have a theological deficit. Jesus was brilliant. He was funny.” The Gospels are more than a weigh-station on the way to the cross. How can we preach, teach, and read the fourfold Gospel for all they’re worth? A podcast interview with Todd Chipman.
Three ways this new resource will help you better understand Revelation and interpretive approaches to the book.
Can church history and exegesis live together in harmony? How did the early church fathers interpret the Bible? What can we learn from them without sacrificing sound exegetical methods? Matt Emerson provides a helpful primer and some interesting examples.
How did this many new languages get added to the “no Scripture and no project started” category?
My perspective as a father and a husband has greatly affected how this low-church baptist came to appreciate and use catechisms.
Grab a catechism and a disciple and start meeting together, bearing each others’ burdens, praying for each other, and Internalizing the Faith.
Not the perfect resource, but one with several useful chapters and appendices for studying Aristotle.