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OverviewEhrman explores how early struggles between Christian 'heresy' and 'orthodoxy' affected proto-orthodox scribes of the second and third centuries, who occasionally altered their sacred texts for polemical reasons. By making their texts 'say' what they were already thought to 'mean', these anonymous copyists effected 'the orthodox corruption of scripture'. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bart D. Ehrman (James A. Gray Professor and Chair of Religious Studies, James A. Gray Professor and Chair of Religious Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.474kg ISBN: 9780195102796ISBN 10: 0195102797 Pages: 314 Publication Date: 29 February 1996 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Awaiting stock ![]() The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you. Table of ContentsReviewsThis detailed, carefully argued, and thoroughly documented study should be purchased for collections serving faculty and graduate students in New Testament studies and church history. --Choice<br> Written in a clear and interesting style. --The Princeton Seminary Bulletin<br> Ehrman's study is well written....This book will be useful for senior seminars and beginning graduate students. --The Journal of Religion<br> Ehrman's is a good book, and one which deserves the attention of scholars --Reviews in Religion and Theology<br> [Ehrman's] arguments throughout deserve our attention; they are frequently compelling....Clearly set out and persuasively presented....Variants that treat of Christ's person and function must from now on always be considered with reference to Ehrman's thesis. --Novum Testamentum<br> This book is highly recommended as an excellent work of scholarship that is of great importance in the development of New Testament studies. Here is a new voice that addresses some of the central theological and historical issues. --Journal of Theological Studies<br> Bart D. Ehrman has written a book which will stimulate the casual reader and intrigue the academic or professional reader of the New Testament....An excellent work and definitely invaluable for lay or scholars. --Anglican Theological Review<br> This is a fascinating book, which deserves a wide readership....I thoroughly recommend this book for its textual and theological interest and for its readability. --Irish Theological Quarterly<br> [A] detailed and carefully documented study. --Religious Studies Review<br> This is a book well worth reading. The New Testament scholar will find in it an excellent study oftextual criticism, systematically organized under the rubric of scribal Tendenzen. The systematic theologian as well as the student of early Christian thought will find in it an excellent expose of the fashion in which conviction colors the way in which one reads the tradition. --Journal of Early Christian Studies<br> <br> In sum, this book is a fine work of scholarship --innovative, judicious, alert, attentive both to its overarching argument and to the supportive details. . . Ehrman's work is provocative and should give rise to further reflection. I believe it will make a significant contribution to scholarship in both New Testament and early Christian history for a long time to come. <br>--Church History<br><p><br> This detailed, carefully argued, and thoroughly documented study should be purchased for collections serving faculty and graduate students in New Testament studies and church history. --Choice<p><br> Written in a clear and interesting style. --The Princeton Seminary Bulletin<p><br> Ehrman's study is well written....This book will be useful for senior seminars and beginning graduate students. --The Journal of Religion<p><br> Ehrman's is a good book, and one which deserves the attention of scholars --Reviews in Religion and Theology<p><br> [Ehrman's] arguments throughout deserve our att In sum, this book is a fine work of scholarship --innovative, judicious, alert, attentive both to its overarching argument and to the supportive details. . . Ehrman's work is provocative and should give rise to further reflection. I believe it will make a significant contribution to scholarship in both New Testament and early Christian history for a long time to come. --Church History This detailed, carefully argued, and thoroughly documented study should be purchased for collections serving faculty and graduate students in New Testament studies and church history. --Choice Written in a clear and interesting style. --The Princeton Seminary Bulletin Ehrman's study is well written....This book will be useful for senior seminars and beginning graduate students. --The Journal of Religion Ehrman's is a good book, and one which deserves the attention of scholars --Reviews in Religion and Theology [Ehrman's] arguments throughout deserve our att Author InformationBart Ehrman is James A. Gray Professor and Chair of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and the author of two dozen books in the fields of New Testament and Early Christianity. 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