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Luke the Historian in the Light of Research is unavailable, but you can change that!

Throughout the nineteenth century, historical research and the rise of higher criticism inspired a new interest in the Gospel of Luke. In this volume, derived from a collection of lectures delivered at the Northfield Christian Workers’ Conference in 1919, Robertson defends supernatural origin of the Bible in general and the inspiration of Luke in particular. He discusses the authorship and dating...

use of the plural and the word ‘first’ force this inference upon us.” Clement of Alexandria lived, of course, in Egypt and knew conditions there. Did he have any other information than that which Luke gives us? He makes the definite statement that the system of enrolments in Syria began with the one at which the birth of Jesus took place.1 It had been suggested that the “Indictional Periods” of fifteen years, known in the fourth century (see Rainer Papyri), began with the first census of Quirinius.
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