Boeken hans kung biography
•
•
Geschichte der hebräischen Sprache und Schrift
Subject:research and history
For more information on the explanation of the Best Hebrew manuscripts of the Old Testament by the top Linguistic and Manuscript expert C.D. Ginsburg ... (who also translated the Hebrew New Testament) :
( Introduction to the Massoretico-critical edition of the Hebrew Bible - Vol # 1 ) . ; ( Masoretico-critical - Vol # 2 ) . ;
The superior and Textually accurate Old Testament written in Hebrew has always been the Old Testament in Hebrew Manuscript, classic edition of 1524-25 [ben chayyim] Printed by Daniel Bomberg , and it remains the best Hebrew Old Testament text, still to this day. This is also the version used to compare to the Dead Sea scrolls and demonstrate that the ancient Hebrew text had NOT been changed nor altered. [ The 1524-25 Old Testament is also the Old Testament in Hebrew that was used by Calvin, and everyone else, until the falsified version of Kittel (apostate occultist) appeared through the Anti-reformation German Bible Society ] . Do your own research. You alone are responsible for the information you accept. Its your eternity.
Available here The Second Rabbinic Bible - ben Hayyim ibn Adonijah
Vol 01,
•
Christianity and World Religions from the Perspective of Hans Küng
S. Béla VISKY, PhD Protestant Theological Institute of Cluj-Napoca Christianity and World Religions from the Perspective of Hans Küng Hans Küng, the Swiss-born Catholic theologian (Sursee, b.1928- ), is undoubtedly one of the most prominent thinkers of the turn of the century. A deep empathy pairs his relentless criticism; he is as radical in formulating questions, as he is understanding towards those who are or have ever been existentially affected by the issues under discussion. His faith, seeking for understanding, stands at the core of his explorations, which encompass enormous philosophical, theological, historical (both religious and ecclesiastic), psychological and, last but not least, literary material. Nevertheless, while Anselm of Canterbury's proposition, fides querens intellectum, together with its practical modalities could be understood as intellectual “physical exercises” within the religious and ideological stability of the Middle Ages, the same enquiry takes on more dramatic forms for an individual fighting the demons of modern and postmodern relativism. Küng shows with convincing logical consistency that contemporary man's loss of direction and values is the consequence of a nihilisti