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Jan 1, 1863 — Jan 1, 1936· 73 yrs

BIBLE · COMMENTARIES

Alexander Nairne

10
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It is a daunting task for a reader to face sixty-six chapters in page after page of unbroken print.

— from Isaiah

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#1

Isaiah

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The volumes in The Church's Bible are designed to present the Holy Scriptures as understood and interpreted during the first millennium of Christian history. In his extremely thorough work on Isaiah, Robert Wilken brings to bear his considerable knowledge of early Christianity. Drawing on writings of the church fathers -- Eusebius of Caesarea, Ambrose, Jerome, Cyril of Alexandria, Theodoret of Cyrus, Bernard of Clairvaux, and nearly sixty others -- all of them masterfully translated, this work allows the complex words of Isaiah to come alive. Wilken's selection of ancient commentators clearly illuminates how Isaiah was used by the New Testament writers and understood by the early church fathers. Each chapter begins with a modern English translation of the septuagint, prepared by Moisés Silva. Editorial comments provide a foundation for understanding the excerpted commentaries and other writings that follow for each chapter. Isaiah: Interpreted by Early Christian and Medieval Commentators is ideal for devotional and spiritual reading and for a deeper understanding of the church's historical interpretation of this major prophet. - Publisher.

#2

Epistle to the Hebrews

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#3

The Epistle to the Hebrews

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This book has been written with the hope that it may help the general reader to grasp the arguments of the Epistle and to feel their force. This last important end is not very well served by the type of treatise that scholars write for scholars. These are indeed valuable for aiding those who teach others. For such the minute examination of verses, phrases, words, parts of speech is helpful. But the plain reader is embarrassed by technical disquisitions and the elaborate weighing of all possible or impossible meanings, and is left barren by quotations from ancient writers in dead languages. For the readers here in view it has seemed more useful to give usually conclusions reached as to the meaning of the writer rather than the processes and grounds of the conclusions. - Foreword.

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