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A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature by Walter Bauer
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A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian…

by Walter Bauer

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1,04373,841 (4.54)1
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University Of Chicago Press (2000), Edition: 3rd, Hardcover

Member:michaelpahl
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:lexicon, new testament
Recently added byGAW, ejwood, Bob_Jeffers, masanders, arguffey, jbmorgan86, private library, chuckander1

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  1. Anonymous user recommends Abridged Greek-English Lexicon by Henry George Liddell, "Bauer is an alphabetical list of all the words in the New Testament with very standard suggestions for translation. It is as expensive as Liddell, and (see more) covers far less ground. Since Liddell also includes all of the New Testament vocabulary, I can't imagine anyone wanting to waste money on the Bauer. If you already have the abridged or intermediate Liddell, save your money toward an upgrade to the Unabridged."
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This work is absolutely indispensible if the goal is a realistic grasp of the NT and related material. It has been useful for any language work in additional to the primary texts in question.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who plotted to kill Hitler although he was an ordained Lutheran minister, and in fact was motivated to act as a Christian by plotting to kill Hitler, commented on Romans 13:4 and the state practicing ekdikos (defined as 1. avenger: Bauer, A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament, p. 238; 1. champion; 2. legal representative: Lampe, A Patristic Greek Lexicon, p. 427). You should note that Romans 13:4 is the only verse where the term applies to the state. Every other biblical use of the word refers to God as the avenger and the context refers to the state as a legitimate avenger to "bring (God's) wrath upon the evil-doer" (Bauer, Lexicon, p. 238). The state is a legitimate avenger only in the case of an evil-doer. Bonhoeffer clarifies the verse by stating: "no state is entitled to read into St. Paul's words a justification of its own existence. Should any State take to heart those words, they would be just as much a challenge to repentance for that State as they are for the Church" (The Cost of Discipleship, p. 294). Bonhoeffer means that no State can justify its existence based on this passage, rulers should be "God's minister for the sake of the fellowship of charity" (Discipleship, p. 294). The State should be driven to repentance just as believers are.

The issue for a believer, also in the same context, is in Romans 13:5, suneidesin (conscience). The State for Bonhoeffer, as for many Christians, is what to do when the State is not repentant and in fact evil, i.e., Nazism. Bonhoeffer concluded his righteous act, acting as a faithful God-fearing Christian, was to plot and kill Hitler.

For many Christians our opposition to the State is not quite as dramatic as Bonhoeffer, who eventually was hung for his efforts to kill Hitler, although his point is still valid. Our conscience dictates that we must at times oppose the State. Otherwise, one could argue for example if a Christian lives under a legitimate God-appointed State ruler, such as a Christian living under sharia law, Christians ought to convert to Islam. Surely there are places and times where Christians will live in a non-repentant, evil regime and the duty of the Christian is to resist the regime. Christians must have opposed Roman authorities or Christianity would have had a short existence.
  gmicksmith | Jul 21, 2009 |
I used the heck out of this thing in seminary, and for some exegisis I did afterwards. ( )
  iceT | May 18, 2009 |
A Lexicon Fit for Years of Study

This lexicon is invaluable for doing Greek word studies.

As a layman struggling to teach myself Greek, I find it a great place from which to launch my Greek word studies. It contains more than 15,000 references to classical, intertestamental, early Christian and modern literature.

This edition contains more elaborate definitions of Greek terms than other lexicons I have seen. The benefit of these, to me, is that it helps give me a fuller sense of the word being studied and helps me to avoid anachronisms.

There is no doubt in my mind that this is the lexicon for serious Greek students. ( )
  PointedPundit | Mar 25, 2008 |
2nd edition revised and augmented by F. Wilbur Gingrich and Frederick W. Danker from Walter Bauer's fifth edition, 1958.
  mike.sproul | Mar 8, 2008 |
Amazing what one person accomplished in the way of corpus linguistics . . . over a century before any corpus linguistics software was available. A fundamental tool for studying the Greek New Testament. ( )
  June6Bug | Oct 30, 2007 |
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Bauer lexicon

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Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0226039323, Hardcover)

Exhaustive and irreplaceable, Walter Bauer's lexicon is one of the great momuments of biblical and related scholarship, perfect for English speaking students working in the Greek text.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400)

(see all 2 descriptions)

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