The Greek New Testament is priceless in its value as it is how God has given us his revelation of the gospel and of Jesus Christ. While a few trusted Greek texts are in print, significant advances have been made in Greek translation studies of the New Testament since a...
The Greek New Testament is priceless in its value as it is how God has given us his revelation of the gospel and of Jesus Christ. While a few trusted Greek texts are in print, significant advances have been made in Greek translation studies of the New Testament since a standard text was adopted by academics in 1975. *The Greek New Testament, Produced at Tyndale House, Cambridge* has been created under the oversight of editors Dr. Dirk Jongkind (St. Edmund's College, University of Cambridge) and Dr. Peter Williams (Tyndale House, Cambridge). Together with their team, they have taken a rigorously philological approach to reevaluating the standard text-reexamining spelling and paragraph decisions as well as allowing more recent discoveries related to scribal habits to inform editorial decisions. Ideal for students, scholars, and pastors alike, and published to coincide with the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, *The Greek New Testament, Produced at Tyndale House, Cambridge* is a groundbreaking contribution to biblical scholarship.
Features:
* 5.375" x 8.375" * 10 pt, Adobe Text * 540 pages * Black letter text * Single-column, paragraph format * Textual apparatus * Smyth-sewn binding * Packaging: None
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The Greek New Testament is priceless in its value as it is how God has given us his revelation of the gospel and of Jesus Christ. While a few trusted Greek texts are in print, significant advances have been made in Greek translation studies of the New Testament since a...
The Greek New Testament is priceless in its value as it is how God has given us his revelation of the gospel and of Jesus Christ. While a few trusted Greek texts are in print, significant advances have been made in Greek translation studies of the New Testament since a standard text was adopted by academics in 1975. *The Greek New Testament, Produced at Tyndale House, Cambridge* has been created under the oversight of editors Dr. Dirk Jongkind (St. Edmund's College, University of Cambridge) and Dr. Peter Williams (Tyndale House, Cambridge). Together with their team, they have taken a rigorously philological approach to reevaluating the standard text-reexamining spelling and paragraph decisions as well as allowing more recent discoveries related to scribal habits to inform editorial decisions. Ideal for students, scholars, and pastors alike, and published to coincide with the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, *The Greek New Testament, Produced at Tyndale House, Cambridge* is a groundbreaking contribution to biblical scholarship.
Features:
* 5.375" x 8.375" * 10 pt, Adobe Text * 540 pages * Black letter text * Single-column, paragraph format * Textual apparatus * Smyth-sewn binding * Packaging: None
The Greek New Testament (Produced At Tyndale House Cambridge)$69.99
Koorong code483961
ISBN9781433552175
Pages540
PublisherCrossway
Publication date15 November 2017
Dimensions38 x 133 x 196mm
Weight0.733kg
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This critical edition of the Greek New Testament (GNT) is based on text critical work undertaken by Samuel Prideuax Tregelles (1813 - 1875), and employs a documentary approach that seeks to """". . . present the New Testament books in the earliest form in which they are attested. """" In a strictly practical sense, the text of our edition largely conforms to the current United Bible Society and Nestle Aland GNTs, albeit with markedly different orthographic, book order, and paragraphing features. For example, our edition replicates the ancient tendency to use the dipthong '-ei' for '-i' in certain books (e. g. 'geinomai' instead of 'ginomai' in Mark), but unlike what appears in the UBS and NA editions, no attempt was made to standardize such. Further, many non-dative iota subscripts are absent in this edition (e. g. see Mark 6:56), while one will consistently encounter the ancient paragraphing method known as 'ekthesis' in which the first line of a new section protrudes into the left margin. Perhaps the most dislocating feature for modern readers of the New Testament, however, is the order in which the books are presented: the Gospels and Acts followed by the General Letters, the Paulines and Hebrews, concluding with the Apocalypse. This, of course, is representative of what appears in the majority of the earliest complete manuscripts. To close, the Tyndale House GNT makes an excellent complement to the UBS, NA and SBL editions.