The following monograph on the Third Chapter of the Epistle to the Romans is respectfully and diffidently submitted to the judgement of scholarly students of the Bible. It has been a "labour of lov…
James Smith, an accomplished yachtsman, has given a narrative of Paul's voyage. He follows this with dissertations on the wind Euroclydon, the island Melita, the hips of the ancients, and geologica…
This book first appeared in 1145 and has veen ascribed to several differnt authors, among them Bernard of Clairvaux and Guigo the Chartusian. Today its author is known to have been William of Saint…
Charles Dickens's first novel, which immediately made him a literary sensation, was pickwick papers, first published serially from 1836 to 1837 under the pseudonym Boz and in book form in 1837. At …
The author here offers a fresh literary-critical introduction to the dominant literature of the New Testament, the major letters of the apostle Paul: Romans, 1and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippi…
The work of biblical interpreter has perhaps never been more confusing and complex than it is now. The replacement of modern historical-critical study as the dominant paradigm by the much more diff…