new testament

Bruce, F.F. – Archaeological Confirmation of the New Testament

Biblical archaeology, for most people to whom the expression means anything, is almost exclusively associated with the Old Testament. There are several reasons for this. One is that the historical setting of the New Testament—the Graeco-Roman world of the first century A.D.—was well-known from the writings of classical authors of the period, and there was no need for archaeological research to recover the record of vanished civilizations such as form the historical setting of the greater part of the Old Testament narrative.

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Delitzsch Hebrew NT

Delitzsch Hebrew NT

This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work.

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Delitzsch Hebrew NT

The Greek New Testament – Byzantine Textform.nt

Author(s): Robinson, Maurice A.; Pierpont, William G.
Module version: 1.1
Description: Greek New Testament in the Original Greek, Byzantine Majority Text

with Strong’s, Morphology, and NA27, BYZ, variants

Robinson-Pierpont edition

By Robinson, Maurice A.; Pierpont, William G.

The text, morphology, variants, etc of this Bible is Copyright © 2019 Ulrik Sandborg-Petersen – Released under the MIT License – Public Domain. Copy freely which is available here: https://github.com/byztxt/byzantine-majority-text

What is the Byzantine Text?

The New Testament is translated from Greek. Editions of the Greek New Testament are prepared from manuscripts, which were copied by hand and do not always agree. Manuscripts are grouped into families or texts based on their shared readings. The Byzantine Text is a family that contains 90%+ of all Greek New Testament manuscripts.

Why use the Byzantine Text?

Dr. Maurice Robinson, the most respected living proponent of the Byzantine priority theory, summarized the case for Byzantine Priority in this “New Testament Textual Criticism: The Case for Byzantine Priority” (Also available in theWORD Bible Software) initially published in the appendix to the Robinson-Pierpont 2005 edition.

Please note:

This Compilation is Copyright © 2019 by Robinson and Pierpont

Anyone is permitted to copy and distribute this text or any portion of this text. It may be incorporated in a larger work, and/or quoted from, stored in a database retrieval system, photocopied, reprinted, or otherwise duplicated by anyone without prior notification, permission, compensation to the holder, or any other restrictions. All rights to this text are released to everyone, and no one can reduce these rights at any time. Copyright is not claimed nor asserted for the new and revised form of the Greek NT text of this edition, nor for the original form of such as initially released into the public domain by the editors, first as printed textual notes in 1979 and in continuous-text electronic form in 1986. Likewise, we hereby release into the public domain the introduction and appendix which have been especially prepared for this edition.

The permitted use or reproduction of the Greek text or other material contained within this volume (whether by print, electronic media, or other form) does not imply doctrinal or theological agreement by the present editors and publisher with whatever views may be maintained or promulgated by other publishers. For the purpose of assigning responsibility, it is requested that the present editors’ names and the title associated with this text as well as this disclaimer be retained in any subsequent reproduction of this material.

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https://www.theword.net/bin/get.php/The+Greek+New+Testament+-+Byzantine+Textform.nt.exe

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