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Discourse Analysis and the New Testament: Approaches and Results is unavailable, but you can change that!

Some of today’s major discourse analysts of the New Testament have contributed to this resource, including E.A. Nida, W. Schenk, J.P. Louw and J. Callow. Their essays deal with the theory and method of discourse analysis and then demonstrate how to apply that methodology to studying the Gospels and Acts, the Pauline corpus, and the general epistles. Porter and Reed offer a helpful text readily...

Pauline letters supposedly revealing the hands of later redactors who have patched together originally separate letters into their canonical form. For them, the apparent lack of cohesiveness has proved crucial for reconstructing original Pauline texts and their historical situations. Surprisingly, however, there has been little discussion of New Testament cohesiveness from a modern linguistic perspective nor are there any agreed upon linguistic criteria which can be appealed to when discussing matters
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