Bale, Colin. What the Early Church Believed. Moore Theological College. 2001. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/6ac5c1c3-1eff-4b7c-a4e7-b6286a693bf1.
APA citation style
Bale, C. (2001). What the early church believed. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/6ac5c1c3-1eff-4b7c-a4e7-b6286a693bf1.
Chicago citation style
Bale, Colin.What the Early Church Believed. Moore Theological College. 2001. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/6ac5c1c3-1eff-4b7c-a4e7-b6286a693bf1.
Note:
These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Bale speaks on 2 Peter 1. He answers questions that have been raised from the previous week. He looks at Christian life in the 1st and 2nd century. Bale explores the relationship between Jews and Christians in this time. Bale explains the importance of understanding history, as this shows that the gospel hasn't changed. He looks at the circulation of the New Testament, and the development of the canon of scripture. Bale looks at the factors that led to the construction of the development, including the increasing numbers of Gentile believers, the rise of Gnosticism, and of Marcionism. He explains the role and importance of creeds. Bale explains Ignatius of Antoch's and Marcellinust creeds. He looks at different arrangements of the canon over history. Bale shows the reason of the canon as 'fountains of salvation', to show that the church is reponding to the canon, rather than creating it. Cassette label reads : "St Thomas' Anglican church Spring School 2001 You're history 2. What the early church believed"
In copyright - educational use permitted. This item may be used for the purposes of research and study. Please acknowledge St Thomas' Anglican Church, North Sydney and that it is held by Moore Theological College