Passion Week from Byzantine manuscripts

Passion Week from Byzantine manuscripts

Byzantine art within manuscripts generally focused on full-page portraits of the Gospel writers and decorative headpieces. As Annemarie Weyl Carr, Professor Emerita of Art History at Southern Methodist University noted, “Byzantine New Testament illumination stands out for its inventive deployment of the author portrait” (Carr, “New Testament Imagery,” in A Companion to Byzantine Illustrated Manuscripts, ed. Tsamakda, pp. 263–64).

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Palimpsests: The secret lives of manuscripts hidden underneath

Palimpsests: The secret lives of manuscripts hidden underneath

Palimpsests contain an important contribution to our understanding of the history of the biblical text. It has been estimated that as much as 20% of ancient New Testament manuscripts are palimpsests.* 

Yet every time we discover these secret and hidden texts they never radically alter our understanding of the biblical text, but instead, work to time and time again confirm what we thought the words of scripture said all along.

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Who was Nimrod?

Who was Nimrod?

Nimrod, was an ancient Mesopotamian King mentioned a couple times in the Bible. Apart from these two passages in scripture the name “Nimrod” in Hebrew(נִמְרוֹד), or any other Ancient Near Eastern language for that matter, appears in no other place in or outside of the Bible. His identity, details of his life or influence on Ancient Near Eastern culture are a complete mystery.

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Christmas manuscripts (Part 3)

Christmas manuscripts (Part 3)

The preservation of P4 acts as a time capsule, hidden away inside another book, concealed in a jar, buried in a wall, in a house that was eventually buried. And yet, once again, the evidence from documents like it point to the story describing the events of that first Christmas being exactly what Christians have always read, believed, and testified to concerning the incarnation and virgin birth!

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