Description
Author: George M. Lamsa, Rocco a. Errico
Publisher: Noohra Foundation
Published: 05/15/2000
Pages: 432
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.27lbs
Size: 9.02h x 5.98w x 0.88d
ISBN13: 9780963129260
ISBN10: 0963129260
BISAC Categories:
- Religion | Biblical Commentary | New Testament | General
About the Author
Dr. Rocco A. Errico, PhD., DD, is an ordained minister, author and lecturer and one of the nations's leading biblical scholars working from the original Aramaic texts. For ten years he studied intensively with Dr. George M. Lamsa, world-renowned native Assyrian scholar of the Scriptures. In 1970 Dr. Errico established the Noohra Foundation, which is dedicated to helping people of all faiths to understand the Near Eastern background and Aramaic interpretation of the Bible. He is the Dean of Biblical Studies for Dr. Barbara King's School of Ministry, Hillside Chapel and Truth Center in Atlanta, Georgia, where he teaches ongoing classes based on the Aramaic texts of the Bible. He also presents an online class one Saturday a month under the auspices of the Aramaic Bible Institute (www.aramaicbibleinstitute.com). Dr. Errico is the recipient of numerous awards and academic degrees, including a doctorate in Letters from the College of Seminarians, The Apostolic Succession of Antioch and the Church of the East-American See a doctorate in Divinity from St. Ephrem's Institute in Sweden, and a doctorate in Philosophy from the School of Christianity in Los Angeles. Dr. George M. Lamsa, ThD (1892-1975) was born in a civilization with customs, manners and language almost identical to those in the time of Jesus. His native tongue was full of similar idioms and parables, untouched by the outside world in 1900 years. Dr. Lamsa's formal education began under the priests and deacons of the ancient Church of the East and he later graduated with the highest honors ever bestowed from the Archbishop of Canterbury's Colleges in Iran and Turkey. After arriving in the United States in his early 20s, Dr. Lamsa worked by day as a printer, and by night he went to school. He later studied at the Episcopal Theological Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia, and at Dropsie College in Philadelphia. It was his own inner compulsion, and the urging of hundreds who heard him lecture, that drove him forward and brought about-after 30 years of labor, research and study-his translation of the Holy Bible from a branch of the ancient Aramaic language that the earliest Christians used.
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