The incarnation is in itself an unfathomable mystery, but it makes sense of everything else that the New Testament contains.
This one word 'grace' contains within itself the whole of New Testament theology.
The new novel is sought more eagerly, and devoured more greedily, the New Testament.
To paraphrase Paul from the New Testament, he has a great soliloquy about love, where he's basically saying, if I've figured out the secrets of the universe but I don't have love, figuring out the secrets of universe means nothing.
You cannot criticize the New Testament. It criticizes you.
So long as the New Testament served to decipher the Old, it was taken as an absolute norm.
Is it not a species of blasphemy to call the New Testament revealed religion, when we see in it such contradictions and absurdities.
In terms of the New Testament the Jews must suffer, therefore we will put it into practice if we will in charge and there will be no sympathy for the Jews when the blacks take over.
The New Testament witnesses were fully aware of the background against which the resurrection took place.
Subtract from the New Testament the miraculous and highly impossible, and what will be the remainder?