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Richard Simon Critical History of the Text of the New Testament: Wherein Is Established the Truth of the Acts on Which the Christian Religion Is Based

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ISBN-10: 9004244204

ISBN-13: 9789004244207

Edition: 2013

Authors: Andrew Hunwick

List price: $203.00
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Description:

In Critical History of the Text of the New Testament, 17th century Oratorian Richard Simon (1638-1712), 'father' of modern biblical criticism, surveys the genuineness, accuracy, authority, and reliability of all then known sources of the New Testament. He makes rigorous, objective, and expert use of a staggering quantity of material relating to the text-Greek and Latin manuscripts, early versions, quotations from the Old Testament in the New, from the Church Fathers and other commentators of all periods. Though in his day Simon was contradicted, opposed, persecuted, and silenced, it is precisely because, three centuries ago, he dared to be different, and because of his knowledge and his…    
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Book details

List price: $203.00
Copyright year: 2013
Publisher: Brill Academic Pub
Binding: Cloth Text 
Size: 6.50" wide x 9.75" long x 1.00" tall
Weight: 1.628
Language: English

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Preface
Richard Simon (1638-1712): Sketch of Life and Career
Disproof of Early Heretics' Arguments against the Validity of the Books in the New Testament. Remarks on the Premise Applied by Church Fathers to Prove the Books' Genuineness
Titles Heading the Gospels and Other Books in the New Testament. Whether the Titles Are by the Authors of Those Books or Whether They Were Added
Books Published in the Name of Jesus Christ and the Apostles. Of Several Forgeries by Early Heretics. Remarks on This Whole Question
The First Fathers Did Not Produce the Originals of the New Testament in Their Disputes with Heretics. Discussion of Evidence Used to Show That Churches Retained Such Originals
The Books of the New Testament Starting with the Gospel of St Matthew. The Original of This Gospel Was Written in the Hebrew Spoken by the Jews in Jerusalem at That Time. Rejoinder to Reasons Contrary to This View
In the Time of Jesus Christ and the Apostles, Jews in the Area of Jerusalem Spoke Chaldaic or Syriac. Mr Voss's Arguments against This View. Clarification of Problems Pertaining to This Question
The Nazarene Sect and Their Hebrew or Chaldaic Version of the Gospel of St Matthew
The Ebionites. Their Version of the Gospel of St Matthew. Other Early Heretics Who Used This Gospel
The Greek Text of St Matthew. Its Status. Comparison with the Hebrew or Chaldaic Text. Rejoinders to Heretics' Objections to This Gospel
The Dates and Order of the Gospels. Greek Manuscript Copies of St Mark Cited in This Regard. His Gospel Generally Believed to Be the Second. His Role as St Peter's Interpreter
In Which Language Did St Mark Write His Gospel? The Last Twelve Verses of His Gospel Are Lacking in Several Greek Manuscripts
The Gospel of St Luke. What Made Him Publish It, Given the Existence of Two Others Published before His. Of Marcion and His Text of the Gospel of St Luke. The Catholics also Made Some Alterations to This Gospel
The Gospel of St John. Heretics by Whom It Was Rejected. Their Reasons. Response to Those Reasons. Discussion of the Twelve Verses from This Gospel Which Are Absent from Some Early Manuscripts. Several Greek Manuscripts Cited to Overcome This Difficulty. Critics Who Falsely Believed That the Final Chapter of This Gospel is Not by St John
Acts of the Apostles as Accepted within the Church. Acts Ascribed to Other Apostles Are of Doubtful Authenticity
St Paul's Epistles in General. Marcion and His Text of Those Epistles. Forged Letters Ascribed to St Paul
The Epistle to the Hebrews: Is It by St. Paul, and Is It Canonical? Views of the Early Eastern and Western Churches; Views on This Epistle from More Recent Times
The Catholic or Canonical Epistles in General and in Detail: Clarification of Problems Pertaining Thereto
Exegetic Discussion of 1 John 5:7, Not Present in Most Greek Manuscripts or Other Western Texts, nor in the Earliest Latin Manuscripts. The Preface to the Canonical Epistles Ascribed to St Jerome in Certain Latin Bibles is Not by Him. The Impossibility of Proving That the Text of St Cyprian Contained the Self-Same Passage from the First Epistle of St John
Revelation: Early Views on This Book; Heretics Who Rejected It; Their Reasons; Discussion of Their Reasons. Learned Catholics in the Early Church also Ascribed It to Cerinthus. Modern Views on This Book
Objections Raised to the Books of the New Testament by the Jews and Other Enemies of the Christian Religion. Did the Evangelists and the Apostles Use the Greek Septuagint When Quoting the Old Testament? St Jerome's View on the Matter. His Misplaced Preference for the Jewish Hebrew Text over the Septuagint
Discussion of Further Doubts about the Books of the New Testament. Part of the Evangelists' and Apostles' Interpretative Method Was to Apply Passages of the Old Testament to the Messiah, a Common Jewish Practice. This, and an Accepted Jewish Tradition, Provide the Only Possible Explanation for Various Words Having a Wider Meaning in the New Testament Than the Old
Analysis of Various Old Testament Passages Seemingly Quoted by the Apostles in an Incorrect Sense. Verification of Criticisms Made of Their Writings. Establishment of Basic Principles for Refuting the Jews and the Emperor Julian
Were the Books in the New Testament Inspired? Refutation of the Opinions of Grotius and Spinoza. Cardinal Du Perron's Mistaken Explanation of the Words Referring to Inspiration in 2 Timothy 3:16. Quarrel on the Subject of Inspiration between the Jesuits and the Theologians of Louvain. Three Jesuits' Propositions Condemned by the Doctors of Louvain and Douai. Defence of the Propositions against Their Censuring by Those Theologians
Analysis of the Arguments Put Forward by Louvain and Douai Scholars in Censuring the Propositions of the Louvain Jesuits Concerning Scriptural Inspiration. One Learned Paris Theologian's Highly Independent View of the Matter
Spinoza's Arguments against Inspiration in the Books of the New Testament
The Evangelists' and Apostles' Styles. Views Held on This Subject by Modern Writers and Early Church Scholars, Followed by Critical Observations
The Hellenistic Language: Is There Such a Thing? Most Disagreements on the Matter Are Purely Nominal. The Arguments Adduced by Claude Saumaise to Disprove the Existence of This Language Serve Rather to Substantiate It. The Greek in the New Testament Can Be Described As "Synagogical" Greek. The Hellenistic Jews, Like All Other Jews, Used the Hebrew Bible in Their Congregations
A Fuller Discussion of Saumaise's Arguments against the "Hellenistic" Language, with Incidental Explanations of Various Problems Pertaining to the Subject
Overall View of Greek Manuscripts, Including Sources Already Mentioned. Compilations of the Diverse Readings Found in Those Manuscripts. Observations on New Testament Exegesis in General. Heretics Wrongly Accused of Corrupting the New Testament Text
Greek Manuscripts of the New Testament. The Oldest Surviving Manuscripts Were the Work of Latin Writers, Intended for Use in Their Communities. Printed Versions Came from the Greek Churches. The Old Latin Text Used in Western Churches before St Jerome Was Based on Early Manuscripts Containing Inaccuracies. The Cambridge Manuscript, and Why It Differs So Markedly from Other Greek Sources
The Second Part of the Cambridge Manuscript, Containing the Epistles of St Paul: Examples of the Variant Readings It Presents: Exegetic Observations
Other Greek Manuscript Sources of the New Testament. Variants Contained in Those Manuscripts, with Critical Observations
Presentation and Appearance of Greek New Testament Manuscripts. Separating of Verses, Chapters, and Other Textual Elements. The Canons Appended to the Gospels by Eusebius, and Their Use
Index