-
Dionysius the Areopagite, respectively. In
biblical studies, the term
pseudepigrapha can
refer to an ****orted
collection of
Jewish religious works thought...
-
Modern pseudepigrapha, or
modern apocrypha,
refer to
pseudepigrapha of
recent origin – any book
written in the
style of the
books of the
Bible or other...
- and
Judgment of Peter,
although scholars believe these works to be
pseudepigrapha. The New
Testament presents Peter's
original name as
Simon (/ˈsaɪmən/...
-
Pseudepigrapha are
falsely attributed works,
texts whose claimed author is not the true author, or a work
whose real
author attributed it to a
figure of...
- 17th-century and 18th-century
English translations of some Old
Testament Pseudepigrapha and New
Testament Apocrypha, some of
which were ****embled in the 1820s...
-
members of
Ethiopian Jewish community.
Jubilees is
considered one of the
pseudepigrapha by the
Eastern Orthodox, Catholic, and
Protestant churches.
Apart from...
- used in its
indefinite form in the Septuagint,
Biblical apocrypha and
Pseudepigrapha. The Gr**** New
Testament uses the
earlier indefinite form
while introducing...
- needed]
Notable examples among the body of
texts known as Old
Testament pseudepigrapha include the
disputed authenticity of
Similitudes of
Enoch and 4 Ezra...
- but
debate on how best to
characterize these varied texts is ongoing.
Pseudepigrapha are
works whose authorship is
wrongly attributed. A
written work can...
- Plato's name or if they were only
attributed to him later. The
concept of
pseudepigrapha does not
entail that they were forgeries. Some
works may have circulated...