Excerpt from New Light on the New Testament: An Account of Some Interesting Discoveries Which Bear Important Testimony as to the Time When the Gospels and Other Books of the New Testament Were Written
Jesus affixed to it, and the suggestion made that we have recovered in it something at least very similar to the Logia which Pa pias attributed to Matthew, - though this old writer certainly meant just our Gospel of Matthew by this designation, despite the efforts of a certain type of criticism to make him mean something else.
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Benjamin B. Warfield (1851-1921) received the degree of Doctor of Divinity in 1880 and that of Doctor of Laws in 1892 from the College of New Jersey; that of Doctor of Laws from Davidson College in 1892; that of Doctor of Letters from Lafayette College in 1911; and that of Sacrae Theologiae Doctor from the University of Utrecht in 1913.
Warfield was a voluminous writer. During his lifetime he published the following volumes: Introduction to the Textual Criticism of the New Testament (1886); The Gospel of the Incarnation (1893); Two Studies in the History of Doctrine (1893); The Right of Systematic Theology (1897); The Significance of the Westminster Standards (1898); Acts and the Pastoral Epistles (1902); The Power of God Unto Salvation (1903); The Lord of Glory (1907); Calvin as a Theologian and Calvinism Today (1909); Hymns and Religious Verse (1910); The Saviour of the World (1915); The Plan of Salvation (1915); Faith and Life (1916); and Counterfeit Miracles (1918). The bulk of his writings, however, made their first appearance in Bible dictionaries, encyclopedias and theological magazines, especially the Presbyterian and Reformed Review and its successor the Princeton Theological Review. Following his death, sufficient of this material to make ten large volumes was selected by his literary executors, Ethelbert D. Warfield, William Park Armstrong and Caspar Wistar Hodge, and published by the Oxford University Press.