The reader's guide to the Encyclopaedia Britannica : A handbook containing…
prologue (see the article LOGOS, by the late Rev. Dr. Stewart Dingwall
391 words | Chapter 75
Fordyce Salmon, professor of systematic theology, United Free Church
College, Aberdeen, and the Rev. A. J. Grieve, professor of New Testament
and church history, Yorkshire United Independent College, Bradford); the
Judean scene as contrasted with the predominance of Galilee and Samaria
in the other three (synoptic) gospels, and the prominence given to great
abstract ideas and symbols—the Light of the World, the Living Bread, the
Only-Begotten, the Re-Birth, Eternal Life, the Way, the Truth, and the
Life, Water and Wine, the Paraclete, and the refrain and variations on
the theme of Love.
Before studying the articles dealing with the book of ACTS, let the
reader consult Dr. Garvie’s article MIRACLE, for a study of the
supernatural and particularly for a development of the argument for
miracles from “the congruity of the miracle with divine truth and
grace”; the miracles of Jesus, and of the apostles, consist in “the
relief of need, the removal of suffering, the recovery of health and
strength.”
[Sidenote: Acts]
The article ACTS OF THE APOSTLES, by Dr. J. Vernon Bartlett, should be
supplemented by referring again to the article LUKE, and the student
should call to mind that the probable author was not a Jew, was a
personal friend and traveling companion of both Paul and Peter, and was
a physician, a trained scientific observer, as can be seen not only from
his descriptions of disease, but from his accuracy in geographical,
meteorological and other matters. The importance of the testimony of the
physician to the miracles of the apostles is brought out (p. 164, top of
column 2) in the article on the book. For the study of ACTS, besides the
article on the book, read the following separate articles:
LUKE, PETER, JOHN, JUDAS, ACELDAMA, MATTHIAS, PENTECOST, TONGUES, GIFT
OF; ANANIAS, GAMALIEL, STEPHEN, SIMON MAGUS, PHILIP, PAUL, JOPPA,
ANTIOCH, HEROD, BARNABAS, ICONIUM, LYCAONIA, MARK, TIMOTHY, SILAS,
PHILIPPI, THESSALONICA, ATHENS, AREOPAGUS, CORINTH, AQUILA, APOLLOS,
EPHESUS, FELIX, ANANIAS, AGRIPPA.
[Sidenote: St. Paul]
For a study of the book of Acts, which was probably written before any
one of the Gospels, one will need constantly to refer in the Britannica
to the article on PAUL, THE APOSTLE (Vol. 20, p. 938), by Dr. J. Vernon
Bartlett. This article, equivalent to 55 pages in this Guide, is so
important that it will be well to outline it here. After an
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