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Gospel of the Hebrews – consisting of seven citations by Epiphanius, GE-1 to GE-7; Gospel of the Nazarenes – consisting of citations and marginal notes by Jerome and others (GN-1 to GN-36) Gospel of the Ebionites – a fragmented gospel harmony of the Synoptic Gospels, modified to reflect the theology of the writer
The canon of the New Testament is the set of books many modern Christians regard as divinely inspired and constituting the New Testament of the Christian Bible.For most churches, the canon is an agreed-upon list of 27 books [1] that includes the canonical Gospels, Acts, letters attributed to various apostles, and Revelation.
Jean Bonet (1844–1907), of the Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales, Paris, translated the Gospel of Luke from French to Vietnamese in 1890 for the Protestant Convention in Paris. [1] In 1916, the Catholic Church published Albert Schlicklin's Latin-Vietnamese parallel text Bible in Paris by the Paris Foreign Missions ...
Gospel originally meant the Christian message ("the gospel"), but in the second century AD the Greek term εὐαγγέλιον (from which the English word originated as a calque) came to be used also for the books in which the message was reported. [1] In this sense a gospel can be defined as a loose-knit, episodic narrative of the words and ...
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Canonical hours, the divisions of the day in terms of periods of fixed prayer at regular intervals. Canonical law, a set of ordinances and regulations governing a Christian church or community; Canonical texts or biblical canon, the texts accepted as part of the Bible Canonical gospel, the four gospels accepted as part of the New Testament
The Gospel of Truth is not titled, but the name for the work comes from the first three words of the text. It may have been written in Greek between 140 and 180 by Valentinian Gnostics (or, as some posit, by Valentinus himself). [2]