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Genesis

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2 Críticas
Crossway Books, 2001 - 384 páginas

The wisdom of the ages can still be read in the Crossway Classic Commentaries, which present the very best all-time commentaries on individual books of the Bible. In this newest release, John Calvin explores key passages of Genesis--a book of important beginnings and memorable accounts that lays the foundation of Christianity. Carefully abridged and stylistically adapted for today's reader, Calvin's insights are an excellent guide for every student interested in fathoming the depths of the Bible's first book.

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Review: Genesis (The Crossway Classic Commentaries)

Procura do Utilizador  - Job Dalomba - Goodreads

Wonderful like most everything he wrote. Ler crítica na íntegra

Review: Genesis (The Crossway Classic Commentaries)

Procura do Utilizador  - CJ Bowen - Goodreads

Outstanding stuff from Calvin. He is over-scrupulous in avoiding the Trinity in Gen. 1, but it's because he is adhering to a hermeneutic that is a vast improvement over most of his immediate ... Ler crítica na íntegra

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Referências de páginas Web

John Calvin's Commentary on Genesis 1-23
But though the Commentary on Genesis was neither the first which Calvin wrote, nor the first which the Calvin Society has republished; yet since, ...
www3.calvarychapel.com/ library/ calvin-john/ 01a.htm

5. Exegesis and Modern Translations
is his commentary on Genesis that has been selected for the Crossway Classic ...... are allocated to each section of Genesis (normally around a chapter). ...
jot.sagepub.com/ cgi/ reprint/ 27/ 5/ 49.pdf

The Old Testament - Lund Books
On the composition of Genesis. Indiana UP, 1990, 122pp, Very Good Condition in dustjacket, ... The Genesis story in Western thought. Yale UP, 1996, 154pp, ...
lundbooks.co.uk/ books/ B40.html

Grant Catalogue
BIBLE FROM SCRATCH, THE: A LIGHTNING TOUR FROM GENESIS TO. REVELATION (NEW ED.) Jenkins S. Witty and informative starting point for looking at the Bible, ...
www.langhampartnership.org/ wp-content/ uploads/ 2006/ 12/ grant_catalogue.pdf

Acerca do autor (2001)

Born Jean Cauvin in Noyon, Picardy, France, John Calvin was only a boy when Martin Luther first raised his challenge concerning indulgences. Calvin was enrolled at the age of 14 at the University of Paris, where he received preliminary training in theology and became an elegant Latinist. However, following the dictates of his father, he left Paris at the age of 19 and went to study law, first at Orleans, then at Bourges, in both of which centers the ideas of Luther were already creating a stir. On his father's death, Calvin returned to Paris, began to study Greek, the language of the New Testament, and decided to devote his life to scholarship. In 1532 he published a commentary on Seneca's De Clementia, but the following year, after experiencing what was considered a sudden conversion, he was forced to flee Paris for his religious views. The next year was given to the study of Hebrew in Basel and to writing the first version of his famous Institutes of the Christian Religion, which he gave to the printer in 1535. The rest of his life-except for a forced exile of three years-he spent in Geneva, where he became chief pastor, without ever being ordained. When he died, the city was solidly on his side, having almost become what one critic called a "theocracy." By then the fourth and much-revised edition of his Institutes had been published in Latin and French, commentaries had appeared on almost the whole Bible, treatises had been written on the Lord's Supper, on the Anabaptists, and on secret Protestants under persecution in France. Thousands of refugees had come to Geneva, and the city-energized by religious fervor-had found room and work for them. Though Calvin was sometimes bitter in his denunciation of those who disagreed with him, intolerant of other points of view, and absolutely sure he was right on the matter of predestination, he was nonetheless one of the great expounders of the faith. From his work the Reformed tradition had its genesis, and from his genius continues to refresh itself.

J. I. Packer is a professor of history and systematic theology at Regent College in Vancouver, Canada.

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