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  2. List of New Testament pericopes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_New_Testament_pericopes

    New Testament stories are the pericopes or stories from the New Testament of Christianity. Events in the: Life of Jesus according to the canonical gospels; Early life.

  3. Lists of Bible pericopes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_Bible_pericopes

    Lists of Bible pericopes itemize Bible stories or pericopes of the Bible. They include stories from the Hebrew Bible and from the Christian New Testament. List of Hebrew Bible events; List of New Testament pericopes; Gospel harmony#A parallel harmony presentation; Acts of the Apostles#Outline; Events of Revelation

  4. Pericope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pericope

    Lectionaries are normally made up of pericopes containing the Epistle and Gospel readings for the liturgical year. A pericope consisting of passages from different parts of a single book, or from different books of the Bible, and linked together into a single reading is called a concatenation or composite reading .

  5. Revised Common Lectionary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revised_Common_Lectionary

    As in its predecessors, readings are prescribed for each Sunday: a passage typically from the Old Testament (including in Catholic, Lutheran and Anglican churches those books sometimes referred to as the Apocrypha or deuterocanonical books), or the Acts of the Apostles; a passage from one of the Psalms; another from either the Epistles or the ...

  6. New Testament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Testament

    The New Testament [a] (NT) is the second division of the Christian biblical canon. ... Paragraph four of its summary states: "Being wholly and verbally God-given ...

  7. Gospel of Mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gospel_of_Mark

    The New Testament as a whole presents four different understandings: Jesus became God's son at his resurrection, God "begetting" Jesus to a new life by raising him from the dead – this was the earliest understanding, preserved in Paul's Epistle to the Romans, 1:3–4, and in Acts 13:33;

  8. Marcan priority - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcan_priority

    In summary, the external evidence stands against Matthew using Mark, inasmuch as Matthew was written first, and against Mark directly using Matthew, unless perhaps either of these canonical Gospels is a translation into Greek influenced by the other. The patristic consensus, rather, was literary independence.

  9. Mark 16 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_16

    Jesus' reference to drinking poison (16:18) does not correspond to a New Testament source, but that miraculous power did appear in Christian literature from the 2nd century CE on. [ 52 ] Julie M. Smith notes that if there was an original ending, "then the Resurrection accounts in Matthew and/or Luke may contain material from Mark’s original ...