Bellett, J.G. – Notes from Meditations on Luke is a commentary on Luke by Bellett (Brethren). His comments are more or less chapter overview and brief.
Notes from Meditations on Luke.
By J. G. Bellett.
(Attributed to Present Testimony, Part 65, August, 1866.)
Pollock Doctrine of Christ 2 John 1:9-11 is a single chapter work of 28 pages looking at different aspects of the Doctrine of Christ.
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CONTENTS
Luke 1 and Luke 2
Luke 3, Luke 4, and Luke 5
Luke 6 and Luke 7
Luke 8
Luke 9
Luke 10
Luke 11
Luke 12
Luke 13
Luke 14 and Luke 15
Luke 16
Luke 17
Luke 18
Luke 19 and Luke 20
Luke 20 and Luke 21
Luke 22
Luke 23
Luke 24
More works by John Gifford Bellet
- Bellett, L.M. – Recollections of the Late J.G. Bellett by His Daughter
- Bellett, JG – The Minor Prophets
- Bellett, J.G. – Woollen and Linen
- Bellett, J.G. – Witnesses for God
- Bellett, J.G. – The Son of God
- Bellett, J.G. – The Profit of the Study of Dispensational Truth
- Bellett, J.G. – The Patriarchs
- Bellett, J.G. – The Evangelists
- Bellett, J.G. – Showers on the Grass.
- Bellett, J.G. – Short Meditations on the Psalms
More works on the Gospel of Luke
- Ironside Addresses on the Gospel of Luke
- Bellett, J.G. – The Evangelists
- Bellett, J.G. – Notes from Meditations on Luke
More Modules from Luke Tags
- Talbot, L.T. – Why Four Gospels? The Four-Fold Portrait of Christ
- McGarvey, J.W. – The Four-Fold Gospel/Acts
- Ironside Addresses on the Gospel of Luke
- Gray, J.M. – Synthetic Bible Studies of the Books of the NT
- Dennett, E. – Commentary on Selected Books of the Bible (CMT)
- Bellett, J.G. – The Evangelists
- Bellett, J.G. – Notes from Meditations on Luke
- Bellett, J.G. – Meditations upon the Four Gospels
- Arlandson, J.M. – Historical Reliability of the Gospels
Topics:A Good Character Brings us to God | The Parable of the Talents | Showing Equity | Complaining About your Life
Excerpt: We should not think that God will give what is “just and right” in our eyes to everybody the same. God has the right to do with us as He wills, and He will give us what we deserve. Consider Job. Was what God did to Job “fair”? If God makes most people blind, “equality” would mean you want to be blind also? God does not treat everybody equally in giving out the things in this life, and praise God for this!
Read the Tract: bs33 Equity and Responsibility.