A Short Commentary on the Book of Daniel
It has been stated by the present Bishop of Durham that the Book of Daniel "exercised a greater influence upon the early Christian Church than any other writing of the Old Testament." Its influence is not so uniform now. It no longer shapes the policy or suggest the teaching of the Church. Bt the loss in breadth seems to be made up by the gain in intensity, If its influence over the "Body of Christ" is less, the spell it casts over the "members in particular" is at least as absorbing.

It is to this individual absorption, or even fascination, that we owe the extraordinary variety in the methods of interpretation of Daniel. Quot hominess tot sententiæ. But Mr. Bevan has a strong hope that the period of diversity and mutual exclusiveness is nearly at an end. His hope is in the scholarship—the strictly scientific scholarship— which is now giving itself to the Old Testament with a singleness of eye never known before. Of this modern scholarship Mr. Bevan's own book is a good, even an illustrious, example. Every portion of the Book of Daniel, every item that tradition or apologetic has furnished about the Book of Daniel, is passed through a most searching examination in the light of Hebrew philology and contemporary history. For some methods of interpretation Mr. Bevan has neither faith, hope, nor charity. No interpretation or tradition need seek shelter under the authority of a name. But if you are willing to begin at the beginning, and to learn what can be said for the Book of Daniel, and every verse of it, by history, sacred, secular, and monumental, and by a most competent acquaintance with Hebrew grammar and philology, this is the book for your purpose.

–The Expository Times [1892]
1100279683
A Short Commentary on the Book of Daniel
It has been stated by the present Bishop of Durham that the Book of Daniel "exercised a greater influence upon the early Christian Church than any other writing of the Old Testament." Its influence is not so uniform now. It no longer shapes the policy or suggest the teaching of the Church. Bt the loss in breadth seems to be made up by the gain in intensity, If its influence over the "Body of Christ" is less, the spell it casts over the "members in particular" is at least as absorbing.

It is to this individual absorption, or even fascination, that we owe the extraordinary variety in the methods of interpretation of Daniel. Quot hominess tot sententiæ. But Mr. Bevan has a strong hope that the period of diversity and mutual exclusiveness is nearly at an end. His hope is in the scholarship—the strictly scientific scholarship— which is now giving itself to the Old Testament with a singleness of eye never known before. Of this modern scholarship Mr. Bevan's own book is a good, even an illustrious, example. Every portion of the Book of Daniel, every item that tradition or apologetic has furnished about the Book of Daniel, is passed through a most searching examination in the light of Hebrew philology and contemporary history. For some methods of interpretation Mr. Bevan has neither faith, hope, nor charity. No interpretation or tradition need seek shelter under the authority of a name. But if you are willing to begin at the beginning, and to learn what can be said for the Book of Daniel, and every verse of it, by history, sacred, secular, and monumental, and by a most competent acquaintance with Hebrew grammar and philology, this is the book for your purpose.

–The Expository Times [1892]
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A Short Commentary on the Book of Daniel

A Short Commentary on the Book of Daniel

by A. A. Bevan
A Short Commentary on the Book of Daniel

A Short Commentary on the Book of Daniel

by A. A. Bevan

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$10.95 
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Overview

It has been stated by the present Bishop of Durham that the Book of Daniel "exercised a greater influence upon the early Christian Church than any other writing of the Old Testament." Its influence is not so uniform now. It no longer shapes the policy or suggest the teaching of the Church. Bt the loss in breadth seems to be made up by the gain in intensity, If its influence over the "Body of Christ" is less, the spell it casts over the "members in particular" is at least as absorbing.

It is to this individual absorption, or even fascination, that we owe the extraordinary variety in the methods of interpretation of Daniel. Quot hominess tot sententiæ. But Mr. Bevan has a strong hope that the period of diversity and mutual exclusiveness is nearly at an end. His hope is in the scholarship—the strictly scientific scholarship— which is now giving itself to the Old Testament with a singleness of eye never known before. Of this modern scholarship Mr. Bevan's own book is a good, even an illustrious, example. Every portion of the Book of Daniel, every item that tradition or apologetic has furnished about the Book of Daniel, is passed through a most searching examination in the light of Hebrew philology and contemporary history. For some methods of interpretation Mr. Bevan has neither faith, hope, nor charity. No interpretation or tradition need seek shelter under the authority of a name. But if you are willing to begin at the beginning, and to learn what can be said for the Book of Daniel, and every verse of it, by history, sacred, secular, and monumental, and by a most competent acquaintance with Hebrew grammar and philology, this is the book for your purpose.

–The Expository Times [1892]

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781663507235
Publisher: Barnes & Noble Press
Publication date: 05/27/2020
Pages: 252
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.57(d)

About the Author

A. A. Bevan (1859–1933) was a British orientalist. He was the son of the banker Robert Cooper Lee Bevan, and his second wife, the translator and poet Frances Bevan. He also had a knowledge of Sanskrit, and was fluent in French, Italian, and German. His published work was relatively small, but of the highest scholarship. He was fastidious and scrupulously careful: as he observed in the course of one of his typically uncompromising reviews, ‘even slight inaccuracies are liable to become sources of confusion’. His friends and pupils could well believe the story that he was almost reduced to tears on discovering a misprint in one of his own works.
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