This volume fills a void in patristic textual analysis by applying the latest methodological advances to the Gospel text of Clement, the earliest of the Alexandrian fathers. Cosaert concludes that Clements text reveals primarily an Alexandrian influence in John and Matthew and a stronger Western influence in Luke and his citations of Mark 10. Paperback edition is available from the Society of Biblical Literature (www.sbl-site.org)
Series Editor's Foreword |
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ix | |
Preface |
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xi | |
Abbreviations |
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xiii | |
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Clement of Alexandria: The Most Learned of All |
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1 | (19) |
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Clement and the New Testament |
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20 | (25) |
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Introduction to the Text and Critical Apparatus |
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45 | (12) |
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The Gospel Text in Clement: Text and Apparatus |
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57 | (162) |
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219 | (32) |
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251 | (26) |
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The Typology of Clement's Readings |
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277 | (28) |
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The Transmission of the Gospels in Alexandria |
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305 | (6) |
Appendix 1: Indeterminable Gospel References |
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311 | (25) |
Appendix 2: Catena Fragments and Latin References |
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336 | (3) |
Appendix 3: The Gospel Text of Clement's Opponents |
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339 | (4) |
Appendix 4: Clement in the Apparatus of NA27 and UBS4 |
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343 | (12) |
Bibliography |
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355 | |
Carl P. Cosaert, Ph.D. (2005) in New Testament and Early Christianity, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, is Associate Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at Walla Walla University.