Description
Ideal for Greek students and pastors, A Reader’s Greek New Testament saves time and effort in studying the Greek New Testament. By eliminating the need to look up definitions, the footnotes allow the user to read the Greek text more quickly, focusing on parsing and grammatical issues. This revised edition offers the following features: • New Greek font—easier to read • Footnoted definitions of all Greek words occurring 30 times or less • Mini-lexicon of all words occurring more than 30 times • Greek text underlying Today’s New International Version • Footnotes offering comparisons with UBS4 • 4 pages of full-color maps Featuring a handsome Italian Duo-Tone™ binding, A Reader’s Greek New Testament, 2nd Edition is a practical, attractive, and surprisingly affordable resource.
About the Authors
Richard J. Goodrich (Ph.D., University of St. Andrews) is lecturer in the department of history at Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington.Albert Lukaszewski (PhD New Testament, University of Saint Andrews) is co-chair of the Hellenistic Greek Language and Linguistics Section of the international meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature. He has also served as editor of the Lexham Syntactic Greek New Testament and is author of the forthcoming Grammar of Qumran Aramaic. He is associate professor at the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota.
Part of a two-course series, Basics of Biblical Greek 1 will introduce you to the vocabulary and grammar of New Testament Greek, so you can begin studying the New Testament in its original language.
The second part of a two-course series, Basics of Biblical Greek 2 picks up where Basics of Biblical Greek 1 leaves off, digging deeper into the vocabulary and grammar of New Testament Greek.