The Revelation of St. john the Divine.
(Having gotten through the remaining Epistles.)
Was the revelation that there were too many epistles?

The Revelation of St. john the Divine.
(Having gotten through the remaining Epistles.)
What Bible are you using that credits Hebrews that way? No one's seriously believed that Paul was the author since the 3rd century CE.The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Hebrews
There are a number of apocryphal epistles, including a third Corinthians. Most of the non-canonical epistles (like the two Clements) are part of what's known as "The Apostolic Fathers Collection." The difference seems to be that the New Testament epistles are by people who knew Jesus (Peter, John, James) or claimed to have had a vision of him after the crucifixion (Paul), while the Apostolic Fathers (Clement) are people didn't know him or have a vision. A different process, and we could have had more canonical epistles.Was the revelation that there were too many epistles?![]()
KJV.What Bible are you using that credits Hebrews that way?
Well, that hurts......Hmm. Are CLB and GC now the only major ST authors without a PIC novel?
Sorry; oversight corrected.Well, that hurts......
...and moving on to my annual read of a classic work of religious fiction during Liturgical Easter. This year, re-reading Lew Wallace's greatest hit, the doorstop known as Ben-Hur.
LW's descriptive passages do tend to make ADF's most verbose and detailed descriptive passages seem downright terse.. . . a great adventure story that's made tedious by the rambling.
I don't even remember much of it (even after looking it up in Memory Beta), but it can't possibly be any more of a downer than Last Best Hope.I understand and respect that A Time to Heal is not meant to be a pleasurable story on the whole, so I will just say good job.
Aw, thanks!I'm just two chapters and an epilogue from finishing A Time for War, A Time for Peace. KRAD's love of the Trek universe and gift for writing characters and dialogue shine through this tale.
But the entirity of Book I is a retelling of the Christmas Story, starting out with three men meeting up in the desert: Balthasar, from Egypt, Melchior, from India, and Gaspar, from Greece.
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