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Types of Preachers in the New Testament is unavailable, but you can change that!

A. T. Robertson contends that “the Word of God is not bound by human shackles,” and that God uses ordinary people from diverse backgrounds to preach and teach. This volume examines the lives and teachings of fifteen minor characters in the New Testament to determine the nature of biblical preaching, including Apollos, Barnabas, James, Philemon, Stephen, Lydia, Silas, Titus, Timothy, Thomas,...

by some that Titus is merely another name for Timothy, Silas, or Titus Justus, but that idea has not gained credence. He was a pure Greek. If he was, as is probable, the brother of Luke, then it follows that Luke was also a Greek, not a Hellenistic Jew. He was one of the first fruits of the Greek world that made such a large contribution to early Christianity. Jesus foresaw (see John 12) that the Greeks would come to him, but only as he drew them by the Cross. Paul sees that the Cross had broken
Pages 149–150