Charles H. Dyer on the Purpose for the Gospel of Mark
The following article is now available in PDF:
My thanks to Moody Publishers for their kind permission to place this article on-line.
The following article is now available in PDF:
My thanks to Moody Publishers for their kind permission to place this article on-line.
Professor Duncan Derrett has kindly allowed me to place of of his many contributions to Evangelical Quarterly on-line in PDF and assures me that even though he is now in his 90s we still can expect more articles to come. J. Duncan M. Derrett, “The Samaritan Woman’s Purity (Jn. 4:4-42),” The Evangelical Quarterly 60.4 (Oct.-Dec. 1988): 291-298….
Today’s free book is H B Swete’s Commentary on the greek text of the Gospel of Mark. This public domain title was digitised from the copy held in Spurgeon’s College library. I am currently working on several large scanning projects, so from today onwards blog posts will be less frequent. Henry Barclay Swete [1835-1917], The…
This is a brief commentary on Mark’s Gospel. Frank Marshall’s series of biblical commentaries were written for students preparing from University entrance exams in the 19th Century. They provide an overview of the biblical books they cover and include numerous summary lists which appear very helpful. My thanks to Book Aid for making a copy…
Cecil John Cadoux was Vice-Principal of Mansfield College Oxford and MacKennal Professor of Church History. He is remembered for his numerous books on pacifism. His brother was Arthur Temple Cadoux, the author of The Sources of the Second Gospel, which as the book I was looking for when I came across this one. My thanks…
The fact that Vincent Henry Stanton’s series of books on the Gospels as Historical Documents is still being cited in recent works on the Gospels is a good indication of their enduring value to scholars. My thanks to Book Aid for making copies of this public domain set available for digitisation. Vincent Henry Stanton [1846-1924],…
The following Public Domain monograph is now available on-line in PDF: Benjamin Wisner Bacon [1860-1932], Is Mark A Roman Gospel? Harvard Theological Studies VII. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1919. pp.107. Click here to read. Does anyone today argue for a non-Roman origin for Mark?