Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament

Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament
Title Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament PDF eBook
Author Desiderius Erasmus
Publisher BRILL
Pages 340
Release 1990
Genre History
ISBN 9789004091245

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Erasmus on the New Testament

Erasmus on the New Testament
Title Erasmus on the New Testament PDF eBook
Author Robert D. Sider
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Pages 348
Release 2020-04-02
Genre Religion
ISBN 1487533306

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When Erasmus, at Cambridge in 1512, began to mark up his copy of the Vulgate Bible with a few alternative Latin translations and a biting comment here and there in Latin, he could not have guessed that his work would grow over the next twenty-three years into the twenty volumes currently being produced as annotated translations in The Collected Works of Erasmus. His Paraphrases vastly expanded the text of the New Testament books, and brought dynamic and controversial interpretations to the traditional reading of the Latin texts. A new translation based on the Greek text, the first ever to be published by a printing firm, became the basis for ever-expanding notes that explained the Greek, measured the contemporary church against the truth revealed by the Greek, taunted critics and opponents, and revealed the mind of a humanist at work on the Scriptures. The sheer vastness of the work that finally accumulated is almost beyond the reach of a single individual. Through excerpts chosen over the entire extent of Erasmus’ New Testament work, this book hopes to reduce that immensity to manageable size, and bring the rich, virtually unlimited treasure of the Erasmian mind on the Scriptures within the comfortable reach of every interested individual.

Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament

Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament
Title Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament PDF eBook
Author Desiderius Erasums
Publisher BRILL
Pages 332
Release 2022-06-08
Genre History
ISBN 9004477063

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Erasmus' annotations on the New Testament with the variants all dated. Short or long, all are interesting and challenging. They bring us to the centre of Erasmus' religious thought and form a vital companion to his correspondence.

Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament

Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament
Title Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament PDF eBook
Author Desiderius Erasmus
Publisher BRILL
Pages 306
Release 2021-11-01
Genre History
ISBN 9004476253

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Erasmus' revolutionary Latin and Greek New Testament of 1516 was accompanied by annotations intended to be brief but which were already challenging and often discursive. This edition gives them with all their variants. The years 1519, 1523, 1527 and 1535 saw those notes grow and grow in number, size and importance. Some treat just those vital minutiæ which led Aquinas, say, into error or folly when he ignored or neglected them: others form ever-expanding essays spreading over several pages and bringing Erasmus into the centre of controversy. Here, for the first time ever, the annotations are edited and dated. They now form an indispensable companion to Erasmus' letters as a major source of our knowledge of the nuances and development of his thought and scholarship.

Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament

Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament
Title Erasmus' Annotations on the New Testament PDF eBook
Author Erika Rummel
Publisher
Pages 256
Release 1986
Genre History
ISBN

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As well as discussing the contents and aims of the "Annotations," Erika Rummel investigates Erasmus' development from philologist to theologian and traces the prepublication history of the New Testament

Beyond What Is Written

Beyond What Is Written
Title Beyond What Is Written PDF eBook
Author Jan Krans
Publisher BRILL
Pages 397
Release 2006-09-01
Genre Religion
ISBN 9047410513

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Beyond What is Written examines Erasmus' and Beza's multiple editions of the New Testament and the vast body of annotations which accompany these editions. This study provides a new understanding of the many conjectures on the New Testament text proposed by these two renowned scholars as part of their New Testament projects. As a consequence, it not only elucidates their different approaches to New Testament textual criticism, but also clarifies the nature and role of conjectural emendation in sixteenth-century scholarship. As a piece of historical research, this investigation into conjectures in the work of Erasmus and Beza also contributes to the ongoing debate on the nature and task of textual criticism today. The study is an important publication for textual critics and exegetes of the New Testament, as well as for historians of the Renaissance and the Reformation.

Annotations on Romans

Annotations on Romans
Title Annotations on Romans PDF eBook
Author Desiderius Erasmus
Publisher Springer Science & Business
Pages 518
Release 1994
Genre Bible
ISBN 9780802028037

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The Annotations of Erasmus are designed for those who wish to take the study of the Bible seriously. Erasmus himself declared as much: his Annotations were not written, he implied, to provide pleasant diversions or popular entertainment. They were a work of genuine biblical scholarship. They brought to bear on theological issues of the day the light of Scripture interpreted from its own historical and literary contexts -- often with disturbing clarity. They are, moreover, replete with that Erasmian irony that so effectively exposed the personal and institutional follies of all parties in the early years of the Reformation. Erasmus wrote annotations on all the New Testament books, but among them all the annotations on Romans must hold a special place. The Epistle to the Romans has been understood as the classic theological statement by the Apostle to the gentiles of the terms on which Divine grace embraced all human beings. Besides, centuries of reflection have made Romans a focus of debate on central theological issues -- for example, the relation of the Divine Persons, the predestination of the saints, the doctrine of justification. To such problems the sometimes tortured syntax of the Greek has often obscured the clarity sought from the divine Apostle. Erasmus understood that all discussion of Romans must rest upon a sure grasp of the author's intent. His task, therefore, in the Annotations on Romans was to clarify the text of the Epistle, and so to illuminate the vision of Paul. This translation reveals the annotations as a rich storehouse of methodological discussion and semantic analysis, and a fascinating witness to the theological debates of the early sixteenth century. Volume 56 of the Collected Works of Erasmus series.