![]() ![]() ![]() This is what he says in Book III of that history: I shall take this from the bishop Eusebius’ church history. To begin this short post on Apocalypse, let’s have a quick look at the traditional origin of this book, which is now frequently thrown in doubt by biblical scholarship. You can get a new and well-bound copy here. At one point, by the request of the English bishops, he produced this excellent translation of Scripture, which has become known as the Knox version. He was an excellent author and essayist in English and is well known for his homily collections on various subjects, his satires and even his murder mysteries. Monsignor Knox was a twentieth-century Anglican clergyman who became a Catholic, following an intellectual pathway comparable to the great Saint John Henry Newman in the century before. ![]() Since August, I’ve been doing what I’ve wanted to do for a few years and read through the entire Knox English version of Holy Scripture, a copy of which I acquired when I was at the cathedral in Nottingham. And finally, here is my last short essay on a book of the Bible that I’ve just finished re-reading from top to toe, part of my great journey through the Bible, recently completed.
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