Category: Weblog

  • On the Web (September 9, 2011)

    On the web: Mike Aubrey notes Daniel Streett’s new blog and his comments on reading Greek, and Daniel comments on this question also. Charles Jones notes that Scripture Bulletin is openly accessible online. Rod Decker ponders Mark 14:37.

  • More from Snodgrass on “A Hermeneutic of Identity”

    Apparently, the article that Brian Tucker recently mentioned is part of a series of articles appearing in Bibliotheca Sacra this year, which look like they are providing the written corollaries to Klyne Snodgrass’s earlier lecture series at Dallas Theological Seminary.

  • On the Web (September 7, 2011)

    On the web: Bob Cargill highlights Eric Kansa, Sarah Kansa, and Ethan Watrall, eds., Archaeology 2.0: New Approaches to Communication & Collaboration, which is now freely available online through the University of California. Steve Runge discusses discourse continuity and cohesion. Evernote maintains its existing maximum attachment sizes but lifts file type restrictions from their free accounts.

  • Carson and Moo, Introducing the New Testament, ed. Naselli

    A while back, the kind folks at Zondervan forwarded a survey about their Textbook Plus website, and in return for some feedback there, D. A. Carson and Douglas Moo, Introducing the New Testament, edited by Andrew Naselli (2010), arrived in yesterday’s mail. The text is “a condensation of [the] longer and more detailed . . .…

  • On the Web (September 6, 2011)

    On the web: Charles Jones notes that Exemplaria Classica, a journal for classical textual criticism and codicology, is open access online for all but the most recent volume. Cynthia Nielsen discussess Dialectic of Enlightenment and its proposal about the relationship between demythologization and remythologization. Robert Woods reflects on some selections from Heraclitus. Steve Caruso highlights Tom Verenna’s video about the…

  • On NT Blog

    NT Blog turns eight today, and Mark Goodacre also notes that the German Bible Society has made the main texts of BHS, Septuaginta (ed. Hanhart), and NA27 available online.