| William Smith - 1867 - 1113 pages
...been taken. 2. ASCLEPIADES PHARMACION ( $ap/¿a/oW ) or JUNIOR, a physician who must have lived at the end of the first or the beginning of the second century after Christ, as he quotes Andromachus, Dioscorides, and Scibonius Largus (Gal. DO Compos. Medicam.... | |
| Isaak August Dorner - 1868 - 496 pages
...poison, until under Thebuthis (of whom we know nothing beyond this) heresy appeared with uncovered front. The end of the first, or the beginning of the second century, seems to 1 Appendix, Note QQQ. be the time when this form of Ebionism assumed a more definite shape.1... | |
| James Cranbrook - 1868 - 212 pages
...amended since, by some dishonest hand. There, for example, are the writings ascribed to Ignatius at the end of the first or the beginning of the second century. It is believed that Ignatius did write some letters, not only because Eusebius, that gossipping, weakminded... | |
| Henry Allon - 1847 - 594 pages
...so great as to which of them wrote the gospel, there can be no doubt that that gospel was written by the end of the first or the beginning of the second century. In his eagerness, therefore, to throw discredit upon the claims of the apostle, Dr. Strauss has unwittingly... | |
| John Relly Beard - 1868 - 496 pages
...surnamed the Martyr from the manner of his death, was bora at the close of the apostolic age, either near the end of the first or the beginning of the second century, at Shechem, in Samaria, which, at the time, had become a RomanoGreek colony under the name of Flavia... | |
| Friedrich Bleek, Johannes Friedrich Bleek - 1870 - 460 pages
...it, so that even he knew our epistle. We may therefore conclude that it was written not later than the end of the first or the beginning of the second century. Baur is certainly wrong when he puts it in the middle of the second century, and thinks that it was... | |
| 1870 - 644 pages
...thoughtful, earnest man, who sought in this way to gain over the Jews to Christianity. He wrote toward the end of the first or the beginning of the second century ; at all events, in the first half of the second century before the third destruction of Jerusalem... | |
| James Comper Gray - 1870 - 360 pages
...ascribed the translation of both Testaments to the most flourishing period of the Syrian churches; namely, the end of the first or the beginning of the second century. The New Testament, which contains the four Gospels, the Acts, the Epistles of St. Paul (including the... | |
| Henry Boynton Smith, James Manning Sherwood - 1871 - 690 pages
...reckoned, engross our interest not simply on account of their particular contents, but chiefly because they belong to the end of the first, or the beginning of the second century — to a period, therefore, from which comparatively few written sources are extant that instruct us... | |
| Charles Hole - 1874 - 336 pages
...a period not far removed from the times of the Apostles themselves, for St. John did not die until the end of the first or the beginning of the second century AD, and are enabled to prove that the whole or greater part of the New Testament, as now received,... | |
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