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The Exegetical Guide to the Greek New Testament (EGGNT) closes the gap between the Greek text and the available lexical and grammatical tools, providing all the necessary information for greater understanding of the text. The series makes interpreting any given New Testament book easier, especially for those who are hard pressed for time but want to preach or teach with accuracy and authority. ...

History, 6.14.5–7). A Roman origin for Mark’s Gospel may also help to explain the use of Latinisms in Mark, that is, Mark’s use of Lat. loanwords and idiomatic phrases (for a list of examples, see Turner, Style 29–30). Early church tradition sometimes seems to place the writing of Mark’s Gospel after the death of Peter (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 3.1.1.; anti-Marcionite prologue) and sometimes before it (Clement of Alexandria in his Hypotypōseis as recorded in Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, 2.15.1–2;
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