Tag: On the Web

  • Donnerstag Digest (March 31, 2011)

    Recently in cyberspace: Southern Seminary provides a set of recent lectures by Richard Bauckham (HT: Tim Henderson). Jeremy quotes Henri De Lubac “on the dangers of learning our catechism against someone.” The Center for the Study of Christian Origins provides a lecture and question and answer session by Larry Hurtado. Reports begin circulating about several…

  • Donnerstag Digest (March 10, 2011)

    This week in the blogosphere: Kirk Lowery discusses “Strongs Numbers & the Problem of a Universal Index,” particularly for Biblical Hebrew morphology and lexicography. Robert Woods reviews Henry Petroski’s Book on the Bookshelf. Chris Allen and D. A. Carson discuss the Westminster Catechism via rap (HT: John Byron). The SBL Greek New Testament is now…

  • Donnerstag Digest (March 3, 2011)

    This week in the blogosphere: Rod Decker highlights The Illustrated Guide to a PhD. Archaeologists begin excavating an Abrahamic-era water tunnel (HT: Joel Watts). The Thesaurus Linguae Graecae has released a version of the Liddell-Scott-Jones lexicon tagged to their textual database (HT: Tommy Wasserman). The E-corpus Digital Library has added 344 Georgian, Arabic, and Syrian…

  • February 2011 Biblioblog Review

    Matthew Crowe has February’s Biblical Studies Carnival. In February’s biblioblog rankings, Jim West and Joel Watts again top the Biblioblog Top 50 Alexa chart, and James McGrath and Daniel Kirk top the vote-based rankings. By Alexa rank, then, February’s Student Biblioblog Top 10 lines up as follows: Student Overall Author(s) Blog 1 2 Joel L.…

  • Donnerstag Digest (February 24, 2011)

    This week in the biblioblogosphere: Dirk Jongkind discusses the colophons of the miniscule manuscripts 223 and 1305. The Center for the Study of Christian Origins now has recordings of the recent James Dunn and N. T. Wright lecture day at the University of Edinburgh (HT: Larry Hurtado). Brian LePort highlights a snippet from Eugene Peterson…

  • Donnerstag Digest (February 17, 2011)

    This week in the blogosphere: The Oriental Institute continues making additional titles available online as free PDF downloads (HT: Todd Bolen). Rod Decker makes available a conversion chart for the old and new reference systems for the Shepherd of Hermas. Tim highlights some forthcoming books in Pauline Studies. Karen Radner has several essays online about…