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Topic: Quotations from the Old Testament in the New Testament


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In the News (Tue 22 Dec 09)

  
 The New Testament in Cornish
Although the bulk of Cornish literature has been lost, it seems unlikely that the whole New Testament was ever translated into the language.
This is the first time, however, that the entire New Testament has appeared in Cornish.
Since the beginning of the Cornish revival parts of the New Testament have been rendered into Cornish.
www.evertype.com /gram/tn.html   (892 words)

  
 Old Testament - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Quotations from the Old Testament in the New Testament
The Bible of Jesus is the Old Testament, specifically according to the Gospel of Luke 24:44-45 "written in the law of Moses, and in the prophets, and in the psalms...
The question of which Old Testament laws are applicable affects debates on a variety of issues, including homosexuality and the ordination of women to the priesthood.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Old_Testament   (2346 words)

  
 Malaspina Great Books - Old Testament (c. 1250 BCE)
The New Testament quotations from the Old are in general characterized by a freedom and elasticity regarding manner and source which further ten to diminish their weight as proofs of canonicity.
Following the precedent of Origen and the Alexandrian tradition, the saintly doctor recognized no other formal canon of the Old Testament than the Hebrew one; but also, faithful to the same tradition, he practically admitted the deutero books to a Scriptural dignity, as is evident from his general usage.
All the books of the Hebrew Old Testament are cited in the New except those which have been aptly called the Antilegomena of the Old Testament, viz., Esther, Ecclesiastes, and Canticles; moreover Esdras and Nehemias are not employed.
www.malaspina.org /home.asp?topic=./search/details&lastpage=./search/results&ID=71   (15255 words)

  
 Introduction to Textual Criticism
The first complete New Testament to be published was the edition of Erasmus, now known as the Textus Receptus ("The text received [by all]" -- a phrase derived from an advertising blurb in a later edition!).
It once contained the entire Old and New Testaments; in its current state, most of Matthew and smaller portions of John and 2 Corinthians are missing.
It is estimated that seven-eighths of the New Testament text is certain -- all the major manuscripts agree, and scholars are satisfied that their agreement is correct.
www.skypoint.com /~waltzmn/intro.html   (15255 words)

  
 The Old Testament Canon
The Bible used for most Scripture quotations in the New Testament is the same Bible used by the Ethiopian Jews mentioned above and the same Bible used by Christians in the earliest centuries of the Church -- it is named the Septuagint (or LXX).
In any event, one must recognize that at the time the New Testament was written the LXX was in wide use and was widely respected by the authors of the New Testament and the Jewish people living at that time -- otherwise the New Testament writers would not have made use of it.
Unfortunately, this would mean that we must regard the book of Enoch as part of the Old Testament since it is quoted in Jude, and only a very few groups of Christians regard Enoch as canonical.
www.columbia.edu /cu/augustine/arch/sbrandt/canon.htm   (3092 words)

  
 Old Testament - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Quotations from the Old Testament in the New Testament
Christians came to call this group of books the Old Testament because of a belief taught in the Epistle to the Hebrews and based on Jeremiah 31:31-34 that Jesus of Nazareth established a new covenant or testament between God and mankind.
The question of which Old Testament laws are applicable affects debates on a variety of issues, including homosexuality and the ordination of women to the priesthood.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Old_Testament   (1547 words)

  
 B. W. Johnson's The People's New Testament [Table of Contents].
Quotations from the Old Testament in the New Testament.
Cities and Towns Names in the New Testament.
Johnson's The People's New Testament [Table of Contents].
www.mun.ca /rels/restmov/texts/bjohnson/hg1/PNT00.HTM   (65 words)

  
 Purple quotes & quotations
“Fine linen with broidered work from Egypt was that which thou spreadest forth to be thy sail; blue and purple from the isles of Elishah was that which covered thee.
The turgid style of Johnson, the purple glare of Gibbon, and even the studied and thickset metaphors of Junius are all equally unnatural, and should not be admitted into our company.
Rejoice in his memory; and be radiant: leave grief to the children.
en.thinkexist.com /quotes/with/keyword/purple/2.html   (238 words)

  
 New Testament Times
S ince it is from the New Testament that we gain our primary knowledge of Jesus, it is fitting to ask whether this literature is sound and historically accurate.
Nearly the entire New Testament can be found in quotations by the early Christian writers.
A.N. Sherwin-White, Roman Society and Roman Law in the New Testament (Oxford, 1963).
www.manavai.com /articles/art6.htm   (238 words)

  
 Famous Quotations on testament Papers on testament
"If a man would follow, today, the teachings of the Old Testament, he would be a criminal.
"He is come to open The purple testament of bleeding war.
"“Poor deer,” quoth he, “thou makest a testament As worldlings do, giving thy sum of more To that which had too much.” -As You Like It.
www.paper-research.com /quotes/keywords/testament/9.html   (222 words)

  
 Rock of Offense
  The New Testament is filled with quotations from the Old Testament and holds up the Old Testament Scriptures in the highest regard (Romans 7:12; 2 Timothy 3:15-16; Romans 15:4).
The New Testament describes Jesus in many ways.
  The New Testament is that new covenant!
www.ch-of-christ.beaverton.or.us /Rock_of_Offense_1.htm   (1759 words)

  
 10 Basic Steps Toward Christian Maturity-default
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, except in the case of brief quotations printed in articles or reviews, or as the normal function of this web site, without prior permission in writing from the New Life Publications.
Wherever the true message of Jesus Christ has gone, people and nations have been revolutionized, resulting in new life, new hope, and new purpose for living.
Whether you need to discover the basics of the faith for yourself, or lead others into a more meaningful walk with Jesus Christ, Ten Steps is for you.
www.10basicsteps.com   (720 words)

  
 Messiah Truth: A Jewish Response to Missionary Groups
It is truly surprising how many people there are who confess a belief in Jesus as the Messiah, without having first obtained an adequate knowledge and understanding of the New Testament, the main source of information about him.
Jesus Codes: The Real Story : A recent book being used to proselytize Jews to Christianity claims that hidden messages have been found in the Bible proving that Jesus is the Messiah.
Christianity is based on the unique belief that Jesus was God's Son, born of a virgin, sacrificed for the Salvation of man. In reality, as sacrificed virgin-born Savior Son of God, Jesus was not unique.
www.messiahtruth.com /response.html   (720 words)

  
 The Preservation Of The Hebrew: The LXX?
Seeing that there was no LXX while the New Testament was being written none of the Old Testament quotations could have come from the LXX, but the LXX (being made after the New Testament was complete) could have copied the New Testament's translations (in quotations) of the Hebrew Old Testament.
Some of the verses that the LXX supposedly preserves from the Hebrew text (which are not contained in the Hebrew) are: Genesis 4:8; 1 Samuel 14:41; 1 Kings 8:12; Deuteronomy 32:43.
And there dwelt an old prophet in Baithel; and his sons came and told him of all the works that the man of God on that day in Baithal, and the words which he spoke to the king: and they turned the face of their father.
www.ryanhicksministries.com /LXX.htm   (1138 words)

  
 Manuscript Evidence Supports The Bible
Codex Vaticanus (B).  This manuscript dates from between A.D. 325350.  It is a vellum manuscript containing the whole New Testament as well as the Greek (LXX) Old Testament.  It was discovered by modern textual scholars in 1475 when it was catalogued in the Vatican Library where it still remains.
As noted at the beginning of this chapter, in addition to the many thousands of New Testament manuscripts, there are over 86,000 quotations of the New Testament in the early church fathers.
Combine this with the massive amount of manuscript evidence we have for the New Testament, and it is clear that the Christian Bible is a trustworthy and reliable book.
www.myfortress.org /manuscriptevidence.html   (1138 words)

  
 The Canon of Scripture
Notes on the influence of the Septuagint in the New Testament, and a complete list of OT quotations.
The Formation of the Canon of the New Testament, an essay by Benjamin Warfield.
Table showing which of the disputed Old Testament books were included in Christian catalogs of canonical books up to the eighth century.
www.bible-researcher.com /canon.html   (230 words)

  
 Second Maccabees and the Rest of the Holy Bible
And it was the Greek canon, including books like Judith and Esther and Tobit and Maccabees, that the earliest Christians followed: we know this because most of the New Testament quotations from the Old Testament were quotations from the Septuagint, the Greek version of the Jewish Scriptures that contained all 46 books.
This very brief account is not exactly precise, but it is accurate as a general sketch, and the lesson is clear: just as Christians debated about the books of the New Testament, so they debated about the books of the Old.
Akin is a Catholic who used to be a Protestant.) Or look at James Hellmann's Allusions in the New Testament to the Deuterocanonical Books.
lane.elcore.net /truth3.htm   (3770 words)

  
 The Septuagint
Quotations by Jesus and Paul in new versions may match readings in the so-called Septuagint because new versions are from the exact same fourth and fifth century A.D. manuscripts which underlie the document sold today and called the Septuagint.
NIV New Testament and Old Testament quotes may match occasionally because they were both penned by the same hand — a hand which recast both Old and New Testament to suit his Platonic and Gnostic leanings.
New versions take the Sinaiticus, Vaticanus, and Alexandrinus manuscripts — which are in fact Origen’s Hexapla — and change the traditional Masoretic Old Testament text to match these.
www.ekkcom.com /gail25.htm   (296 words)

  
 10955.txt
All the quotations from the Old Testament found in them are taken from five Homilies (iii, xi, xvi, xvii, xviii) out of nineteen, although the Homilies are lengthy compositions, filling, with the translation and various readings, four hundred and fourteen large octavo pages of Dressel's edition [Endnote 38:1].
In other words, it is possible to read three hundred and fifteen pages of the Homilies with five breaks and come to no quotation from the Old Testament at all, or three hundred and fifteen pages with only two breaks and come to none outside the Pentateuch.
xviii had been lost, there would have been no evidence that the author was acquainted with any book of the Old Testament besides the Pentateuch; and, if the five Homilies had been lost, there would have been nothing to show that he was acquainted with the Old Testament at all.
library.beau.org /gutenberg/1/0/9/5/10955/10955.txt   (296 words)

  
 Untitled
The LXX "quotations" and references in the Old Testament which differ significantly from the Hebrew Scriptures were taken directly from the already completed New Testament writings, and then transplanted back into the Greek O.T. translations in an effort to harmonize the different readings.
The LXX got its name by supposedly having been written by six scholars from each of the twelve tribes of Israel who traveled to the city of Alexandria in Egypt, where they miraculously produced their Greek translation from the Old Testament Hebrew Scriptures.
The Bible itself contradicts the idea that God would approve of an authoritative Greek translation of the Old Testament Scriptures that would then be used by the Lord Jesus and the apostles in the making of the New Testament.
www.geocities.com /brandplucked/NoLXXOne.html   (3298 words)

  
 The Canon of Scripture
Notes on the influence of the Septuagint in the New Testament, and a complete list of OT quotations.
The Formation of the Canon of the New Testament, an essay by Benjamin Warfield.
Table showing which of the disputed Old Testament books were included in Christian catalogs of canonical books up to the eighth century.
www.bible-researcher.com /canon.html   (230 words)

  
 Manuscript Evidence for the Bible (by Ron Rhodes)
There are enough quotations from the early church fathers that even if we did not have a single copy of the Bible, scholars could still reconstruct all but 11 verses of the entire New Testament from material written within 150 to 200 years from the time of Christ.
There are also New Testament quotations in thousands of early church Lectionaries (worship books).
There are also some 86,000 quotations from the early church fathers and several thousand Lectionaries (church-service books containing Scripture quotations used in the early centuries of Christianity).
home.earthlink.net /~ronrhodes/Manuscript.html   (1542 words)

  
 WILLIAMS: Review of J. Wilson's The Old Syriac Gospels
The chief support for this is sought in the wording of Old Testament quotations found in the Old Syriac Gospels, which the author gives the impression of listing completely, though a number of important quotations are not considered (Matthew 3.3, 9.13, Mark 1.2—3, 4.12).
However, Wilson fails to consider the possibility that Old Syriac quotations have been influenced by the Old Testament Peshitta.
They contain the fine text of the Old Syriac produced by George Kiraz and it is to be hoped that this publication will encourage further study of these important documents.
syrcom.cua.edu /Hugoye/Vol5No2/HV5N2PRWilliams.html   (1542 words)

  
 The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, Vol. II: Basilica - Chambers (bible_versions)
Krüger and T. Mommsen in Collectio librorum juris antejustiniani, iii, Berlin, 1891); Augustine, bishop of Hippo 123354–430 (from this author alone Lagarde collected 13,276 quotations of the Old Testament and 29,540 of the New Testament); Capreolus, bishop of Carthage c.
Another tradition refers this work to a priest Asa or Ezra, who was sent by the king of Assyria to Samaria, and the rest of the Old Testament with the New to the days of King Abgar V of Edessa and the apostle Addai (i.e., Thaddæus; see Abgar.
Among the prophets, Isaiah (sometimes divided at xxv, 2) is followed by the minor prophets, then Jeremiah (with a division at xxxii, 6) with Baruch i–ii and the Epistle of Jeremiah, then Ezekiel and Daniel.
www.ccel.org /ccel/schaff/encyc02.bible_versions.html   (1542 words)

  
 greektext.html
The Old Testament was based on the Masoretic text type and the New Testament based on the Byzantine text type, the work was accomplished just in time for it to be carried by to America where it became the authorized Scriptures for millions of English-speaking people in the New World.
The New Testament Scriptures of the early church, the wilderness church, the Reformation church, and the Scriptures of our founding fathers were all in essence the Received Text.
Indeed, distinctive Byzantive readings are found in all of the oldest versions, in the papyri, and in the Scriptural quotations of the early church fathers.
dedication.www3.50megs.com /greektext.html   (2731 words)

  
 Old Latin Version (International Standard Bible Encyclopedia)
He was thus able to translate for himself as he made his quotations from the Septuagint or the Greek New Testament, and is thus for us by no means so safe a witness to the character or existence of a standard version.
It is generally agreed that, as Christianity spread, the Syriac and the Latin versions were the first to be produced; and translations of the Gospels, and of other books of the Old and New Testament in Greek, were in all probability to be found in these languages before the close of the 2nd century.
It was through the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament that the great truths of revelation first became known to the Greek and Roman world.
www.bible-researcher.com /oldlatin.html   (2731 words)

  
 Geneva Bible --  Encyclopædia Britannica
The Greek Bible of Alexandria thus became the official Bible of the Christian community, and the overwhelming number of quotations from the Hebrew Scriptures in the New Testament are derived from it.
also called Breeches Bible new translation of the Bible published in Geneva (New Testament, 1557; Old Testament, 1560) by a colony of Protestant scholars in exile from England who worked under the general direction of Miles Coverdale and John Knox and under the influence of John Calvin.
The failure of the Great Bible to win popular acceptance against the obvious superiority of its Geneva rival and the objectionable partisan flavour of the latter's marginal annotations made a new revision a necessity.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9036401   (838 words)

  
 The Errancy of the Masoretic Text and the KJV
In fact, of the quotations in the New Testament of the Old Testament, over 70 could only have been derived from the Greek Septuagint because the Masoretic text either omits the quotation or it exists in so changed a form as to be unrecognizable or have a completely different meaning.
Thus, the Masoretic Text is found to be corrupted both internally and in its relation with the New Testament, while the Septuagint is found to be reliable on both counts, and also the Septuagint was the universal Bible of the first century Christians.
Obviously, the only explanation is that this is an error, that both the King James Version and the Masoretic Text are fallible, and thus the Bible-attackers have refuted the inerrancy of the Bible.
www.christianseparatist.org /sixth/errancy.html   (838 words)

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