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W. H. Griffith Thomas (1861–1924)

Author of St Paul's Epistle to the Romans

59 Works 2,291 Members 8 Reviews

About the Author

Works by W. H. Griffith Thomas

How We Got Our Bible (1926) 134 copies, 1 review
The Holy Spirit of God (1963) 119 copies
1 and 2 Peter (1999) 115 copies, 1 review
Outline Studies in Acts (1956) 109 copies
Christianity is Christ (1981) 82 copies
The Apostle Peter: His Life and Writings (1984) 75 copies, 1 review
Methods of Bible study (1975) 67 copies, 1 review
The Catholic Faith (1966) 64 copies
Grace and Power (1984) 34 copies
The Prayers of St. Paul (1914) 14 copies
The Essentials of Life (1920) 8 copies
The work of the ministry (2010) 6 copies
Law for Retailers (2003) 3 copies
The Acts 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1861
Date of death
1924
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

This book is sixty studies which provide both a comprehensive and detailed outline of Matthew. This is a very useful volume on the Lord's Kingship and Kingdom.
 
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phoovermt | Mar 23, 2023 |
In all, Methods of Bible Study offers a competent program for study of the Bible that is inclusive and useful for the Christian laity, scholars, and preachers. The author makes clear that anyone committed to God, and able to devote effort to their scriptural study, can attain a reasonable level of understanding.
 
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phoovermt | Mar 20, 2023 |
This one's a twofer--two classic commentaries by two different authors in one book. Rev. Thomas' outline of 2nd Peter was terse, to the point and kind of meh. Perhaps my reception of his work suffered because he had to follow Rev. Leighton. Archbishop Leighton did a phenomenal job of studying 1st Peter. He pulls apart the text phrase by phrase, connecting them to other scripture passages and the Christian's daily walk with Christ. I can see why they bothered to republish it over 300 years after it was written.
--J.
… (more)
 
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Hamburgerclan | Jun 15, 2013 |
Griffith Thomas classic book on the 39 articles is a glimpse into the evangelical side of the Church of England. Thomas spends much of the book defending the Anglican brand from its two extremes, Puritanism and Romanism. A moderate Calvinism marks the pages, as Thomas explains each Article, its history, its purpose, and how it has worked itself out over time. The book is very easy to read, and its polemics are mild at best. It would probably do well for all of us to return to our church's foundation documents and reacquaint ourselves with our theological basis. SDG.… (more)
 
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micgood | 1 other review | Jun 9, 2011 |

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Associated Authors

J. I. Packer Series Editor
Alister McGrath Series Editor

Statistics

Works
59
Members
2,291
Popularity
#11,211
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
8
ISBNs
90
Languages
2

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