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Showing posts with label New Testament Bible Study. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Testament Bible Study. Show all posts

Monday, May 20, 2013

Through Suffering Through Victory Relational Studies in Mark Lionel Whiston

Through Suffering Through Victory: Relational Studies in Mark
Lionel Whiston, 1976
Through Suffering Through Victory: Relational Studies in Mark
Rev. Dr. Lionel Whiston (1918-2011)
Word Books, Waco TX, 1976
ISBN 0-87680-997-6

This blogpost presented by Mary Katherine May of QualityMusicandBooks.com.

You will find a tribute and brief biography on Rev. Lionel Whiston written by the son of Pastor Whiston in July, 2011, on the First Congregational Church of Gray, Maine website.










CONTENTS
Introduction
Outline of Mark

1.    Jesus and Marriage: Mark 10: 1-12
2.   Becoming Childlike:  Mark 10: 13-16
3.   Eternal Life: Quality Rather than Quantity: Mark 10:17-31
4.   The Road to Calvary: Mark 10: 32-34
5.   "We Are Able": Mark 10: 35-45
6.   Take Heart: Mark 10: 46-52
7.   Jesus Is Lord! Mark 11: 1-10
8.   A Cleansed Church: Mark 11: 11-26
9.   The Ultimate Place of Authority: Mark 11: 27-33
10. Responsible Stewards: Mark 12: 1-12
11. Caesar and God: Mark 12: 13-17
12. Beyond Our Imagination: Mark 12: 18-27
13. The Great Commandments: Mark 12: 28-34
14. The Mystery of the Human Divine: Mark 12: 35-44
15. Take Heart! God Is with You! Mark 13: 1-13
16. Partners in God's Final Triumph: Mark 13: 14-27
17. Watch--Be Ready! Mark 13: 28-37
18. Graciousness in Action: Mark 14: 1-11
19. Breaking Bread Together: Mark 14: 12-21
20. The Threefold Relationship: Mark 14: 22-31
21. The Humanity of Jesus: Mark 14: 32-42
22. Physical versus Spiritual Power: Mark 14: 43-52
23. Jsus' Response in a Crisis: Mark 14: 53-65
24. Reaction in a Crisis: Mark 14: 66-72
25. Jesus or Barabbas? Mark 15: 1-15
26. Discovering the Meaning of the Cross: Mark 15: 16-32
27. The Shout of Victory! Mark 15: 33-39
28. The Burial: Mark 15: 40-47
29. He Is Alive! Mark 16: 1-8

Through Suffering to Victory: Relational Studies in Mark
Rev. Dr. Lionel Whiston, author

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

They Met at Philippi A Devotional Commentary on Philippians Reverend Carroll E Simcox

They Met at Philippi
A Devotional Commentary on Philippians
 
They Met at Philippi: A Devotional Commentary on Philippians
Oxford University Press, 1958

Author
Reverend Carroll E Simcox, Ph.D. (1912-2002)
Saint Thomas Church, New York City

Kirkus Review of The Met at Philippi
News Article about Dr. Carroll Simcox in The Evening Independent, St. Petersburg, March 20, 1971
News Article: Dr. Carroll Simcox rencounced ministry in the Episcopal Church, July 24, 1980
Wikipedia Article on Dr. Carroll Eugene Simcox


They Met at Philippi: Preface

By general Christian consensus, Paul the Apostle is the greatest Christian who ever lived. Unquestionably he is the greatest in influence.  Whether he is the greatest in spiritual stature God only knows; but that he is worthy of our reverent regard and diligent sutdy need not be argued.

There are difficulties.  It is easy to revere Paul even to love him; but it is not so easy to like him, and it is not easy to understand him.  he is Jewish where we are Gentile, ancient where we are modern, zealous where we are indifferent, paradoxical where we are platitudinous.  He has been called, with considerable truth, the innocent father of all heresies.  He has suffered this fate because he is not generally a clear expositor of his own convictions.  His writing, though profoundly inspired, is seldom easy to read.  Both the casual reader and the professional scholar find these difficulties in his writing many and baffling.

We cannot have a real meeting of minds with Paul except by serious effort, but nobody makes this effort without being richly rewarded.  In this book we are taking Paul's Letter to the Philippians as our literary portal to his mind and spirit.  Among the undisputed Pauline writings it has as good a claim as any to be thoroughly representative of him and to be his simplest, or least difficult, letter.  Paul writes from a prison cell, with the shadow of death heavily upon him, but his mood is serene and his mind is calm.  His heroic faith and deep love for his Lord and his brethren are nowhere more clearly visible than in this letter.  For some readers this commentary may be an introduction to Paul, a first meeting.  I hope that it will truly introduce.

Our procedure is the following: each section begins with a translation of the text, andmy translation of the Letter as a whole is presented at the close.  In the exegesis of each section we try to see what is in Paul's own mind as he writes.  Then we consider, in a discursive meditation, what God is communicating to us through Paul's words.

My purpose as a commentator is devotional, but this word needs precise definition.  A truly devotional commentary on Holy Scripture must deepen the Christian reader's devotion to his Lord.  It's aim is loving knowledge of Him who is the truth.  hence there can be in it no intellectual shortcuts or false simplifcations.  If I am guilty of any such in this work, my offense is unintended.  The purpose of a devotional commentary is to make better Christians out of Christians: to strengthen faith, to enlighten understanding, to quicken love, and ot stir up wills.  Faith and love are gifts of God, but God gives them to us through other people.  A current slang phrase suggests that one person's virtue can 'rub off' on someone else.  Thank God, it is true.  If something of Paul's vision, courage, joy, faith, and love will 'rub off' on us as we ponder his words to the Philippians, again I say: thanks be to God.

It is a pleasure to acknowledge my debt to my friend Eric W. Hutchison for going over this book with me in its preparation and for many wise and illuminating suggestions.

Carroll E. Simcox
New York
January 1958

This blog offering posted by Mary Katherine May of QualityMusicandBooks.com.