Author: G. C. WILLIS
Pages: 100
Publisher: Bible Light Publishers
Publish Date: Unknown
Edition: Unknown
Condition: New.
Binding: Hardback
Markings: N/A.
Description
Hid Treasures
I had a letter from a friend, acknowledging a which contained a few brief comments on some Greek words. He says in part: “Reading your book has well established my long conviction that the most profitable form of study of Holy Writ, is that of the words which “the Holy Ghost teacheth”, viz, the actual study of Greek words and their meaning. For this reason your frequent, and illuminating references to such words have been wells of refreshment to my spirit.”
In these words my friend has expressed more plainly and more concisely than I could do, the object of the little book before you. And as a second witness to the same truth, may I quote a few words written over a hundred years ago by Mr. G. V. Wigram, in the Introduction to his priceless Concordances to the Hebrew & Chaldee Scriptures, and his Greek Concordance to the New Testament. Mr Wigram says of “The Englishman’s Hebrew and Chaldee Concordance’…
“The chief object proposed by this work is a very simple one … it seemed in a peculiar way, desirable to lead each student to deduce his “meaning and definition of words” (so far as possible), from the use made of them by the Holy Ghost.”
Pages: 100
Publisher: Bible Light Publishers
Publish Date: Unknown
Edition: Unknown
Condition: New.
Binding: Hardback
Markings: N/A.
Description
Hid Treasures
I had a letter from a friend, acknowledging a which contained a few brief comments on some Greek words. He says in part: “Reading your book has well established my long conviction that the most profitable form of study of Holy Writ, is that of the words which “the Holy Ghost teacheth”, viz, the actual study of Greek words and their meaning. For this reason your frequent, and illuminating references to such words have been wells of refreshment to my spirit.”
In these words my friend has expressed more plainly and more concisely than I could do, the object of the little book before you. And as a second witness to the same truth, may I quote a few words written over a hundred years ago by Mr. G. V. Wigram, in the Introduction to his priceless Concordances to the Hebrew & Chaldee Scriptures, and his Greek Concordance to the New Testament. Mr Wigram says of “The Englishman’s Hebrew and Chaldee Concordance’…
“The chief object proposed by this work is a very simple one … it seemed in a peculiar way, desirable to lead each student to deduce his “meaning and definition of words” (so far as possible), from the use made of them by the Holy Ghost.”