tetragrammaton.jpg (24161 bytes) The Tetragrammaton
and the
Christian Greek Scriptures
 


CONTENTS

Overview: The Subject of this Book
PROLOGUE

SECTION 1: The Tetragrammaton, inspiration, and a study of the Christian Greek Scriptures.
Chapter 1: What is the Tetragrammaton?
Chapter 2: Inspiration and the Christian Scriptures
Chapter 3: A Greek Interlinear Study (Part 1)
Chapter 4: A Greek Interlinear Study (Part 2)

SECTION 2: Hebrew manuscripts and their place in the inspired Christian Greek Scriptures.
Chapter 5: Matthew's Gospel in Hebrew
Chapter 6: The Textual Source of Hebrew Versions
Chapter 7: The Limit of Inspiration

SECTION 3: Greek manuscripts and other historical and textual considerations which bear on the Tetragrammaton and the Christian Greek Scriptures.
Chapter 8: The Greek Text in the First Century
Chapter 9: Manuscript Publication Dates
Chapter 10: Removal of the Tetragrammaton from Early Greek Manuscripts
Chapter 11: The Tetragrammaton or Lord Quandary

SECTION 4: A final summary and application concerning the evidence for the Tetragrammaton in the Christian Greek Scriptures.
Chapter 12: LORD, Jehovah, and Inspiration
Chapter 13: But if not Heresy, Then What?
Chapter 14: The Indistinct Meaning of "kyrios"
Chapter 15: What "kyrios" Means to Me

EPILOGUE
APPENDICES
Appendix A: "J" Reference Sources
Appendix B: Comparison of 237 Jehovah References
Appendix C: "kyrios" in the Christian Greek Scriptures
Appendix D: The George Howard Study
Appendix E: The Greek Text of the Hebrew Versions
Appendix F: Facsimiles of Early Greek Manuscripts
Appendix G: J20 in the Greek Concordance
Appendix H: A Second Hebrew Version
Appendix 1: A Catalog of Greek Manuscripts
Appendix J: Origen's Hexapla
Appendix K: Nomina Sacra
Appendix L: The Magdalen Papyrus
Appendix M: Jehovah in Missionary Translations
Appendix N: Correspondence with the Society
ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
GLOSSARY
SCRIPTURE INDEX
SUBJECT INDEX

Back Cover reads:

This book is the most comprehensive study of the Tetragrammaton and the Christian Greek Scriptures (the New Testament) available today. The subject of the book is not theology: it is a study of early Greek manuscripts and related historic documents. The book includes:

An extensive study of the divine name, its meaning, its historic setting, and its occurrence in the Christian Greek Scriptures.

An exhaustive study of the 237 "Jehovah" references from the Kingdom Interlinear Translation, including a supplementary investigation of the 712 occurrences of kurios (the Greek word translated as "Lord").

A complete explanation of the "Jehovah" footnote references in the Kingdom Interlinear Translation.

A comprehensive introduction of the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew.

A fascinating review of the writings of the early church fathers and their awareness of the divine name.

A wealth of appendix information related to the divine name and the Christian Greek Scriptures.

The question, "Did the original writers of the Christian Greek Scriptures use the divine name?" is thoroughly explored in this volume. It should be read by anyone concerned with the answer.

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copyright 1998, 338 pages, paperback.

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