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In this volume of the Zondervan Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament series, Grant Osborne offers pastors, students, and teachers a focused resource for reading the Gospel of Matthew. Through the use of graphic representations of translations, succinct summaries of main ideas, exegetical outlines, and other features, Osborne presents the Gospel of Matthew with precision and accuracy.

in the four gospels would be the differences in Samuel-Kings/Chronicles. The gospels combined this with Hellenistic patterns (it was common for Jewish works in Greek to adopt Greek style: cf. Philo). Keener concludes (italics his): Matthew did not write his Gospel without forethought; he was a historian-biographer and interpreter and not just a storyteller.… Like other writers, Matthew would follow one main source (in this case Mark) and weave his other sources around it.… If Matthew’s basic genre
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