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This classic commentary has been a staple for Bible students and preachers for well over a hundred years. This current edition has preserved the scholarship originally penned by J. W. McGarvey, but it has updated the footnotes to help the modern reader and student. Also included in this volume are new maps, charts, and a list of references made by J. W. McGarvey and where to find them online today.J.W. McGarvey (1829-1911) The son of an Irish immigrant, John William McGarvey, was born in Hopkinsville, Kentucky on March 1, 1829. After his father died and his mother remarried, his family relocated to Tremont, Illinois. J. W. McGarvey at the age of 18 enrolled at Bethany College, an institution founded by Alexander Campbell, and the school from which McGarvey would graduate with honors in 1850. While in school at Bethany College, J. W. McGarvey answered the Gospel call and was baptized into Christ. Upon his conversion, he dedicated his life to ministry and the study of the greatest book in the world. He was invited to preach in Dover, Missouri in January 1853, and that March he married Ottie F. Hix, with whom he had eight children. In Spring of 1862, during the heart of the Civil War, he accepted the position to work with the church in Lexington, Kentucky. Later that year his quintessential and original commentary on Acts was first published. By 1865, he was a chair at the College of the Bible of Kentucky University. J. W. McGarvey on October 6, 1911 passed from this life and now waits for the arrival of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
This spiritual classic by J. W. McGarvey and Philip Y. Pendleton arranges the gospel in chronological order, creating a flow and harmony perfect for New Testament study.This thorough commentary is arranged to account for the life of Jesus Christ: we begin with his years prior to entering the ministry, continue through his time spent with John the Baptist and preaching for three passovers, and concluding with Christ's death and resurrection. The major sermons and events depicted in the Gospels receive subtitles, that the reader may follow the narrative progress and easily reference the corresponding scripture. Being as this is a classic narrative, the authors use the King James Version of the Bible. In each part, the four books of the Gospels - Matthew, Mark, Luke and John - are referenced according to the letters A, B, C and D. Variations upon the readings are contained within braces - { } - that readers may gain great insight both into the story of Christ and the context of the Biblical era.
This spiritual classic by J. W. McGarvey and Philip Y. Pendleton arranges the gospel in chronological order, creating a flow and harmony perfect for New Testament study.This thorough commentary is arranged to account for the life of Jesus Christ: we begin with his years prior to entering the ministry, continue through his time spent with John the Baptist and preaching for three passovers, and concluding with Christ's death and resurrection. The major sermons and events depicted in the Gospels receive subtitles, that the reader may follow the narrative progress and easily reference the corresponding scripture. Being as this is a classic narrative, the authors use the King James Version of the Bible. In each part, the four books of the Gospels - Matthew, Mark, Luke and John - are referenced according to the letters A, B, C and D. Variations upon the readings are contained within braces - { } - that readers may gain great insight both into the story of Christ and the context of the Biblical era.
J. W. McGarvey's superb commentary on the Acts of the Apostles is an example of New Testament analysis and discussion accomplished with expertise, scholarship and lucidity.As a scholar of the Bible, McGarvey was struck by the lack of a reliable and authoritative readings of the Book of Acts. Such an important work of Christian history (Acts relates the early spread of the Christian faith through the Roman Empire and beyond) had not received an organized and sequential analysis explaining to readers.The overarching message of Acts is simply that the reason followers of Jesus Christ created an entirely new church distinct from Judaism, is that the Jewish priesthood and temple rejected his teachings and principles. The book depicts a time of rapid change; the legal distinctions of Judaism and Christianity are discussed by St. Luke, as is the apparent contradiction of the Jews rejecting a messiah who was himself born a Jew.
J. W. McGarvey's superb commentary on the Acts of the Apostles is an example of New Testament analysis and discussion accomplished with expertise, scholarship and lucidity.As a scholar of the Bible, McGarvey was struck by the lack of a reliable and authoritative readings of the Book of Acts. Such an important work of Christian history (Acts relates the early spread of the Christian faith through the Roman Empire and beyond) had not received an organized and sequential analysis explaining to readers.The overarching message of Acts is simply that the reason followers of Jesus Christ created an entirely new church distinct from Judaism, is that the Jewish priesthood and temple rejected his teachings and principles. The book depicts a time of rapid change; the legal distinctions of Judaism and Christianity are discussed by St. Luke, as is the apparent contradiction of the Jews rejecting a messiah who was himself born a Jew.
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