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Epistle to the Romans

481 bytes added, 03:22, June 19, 2013
Major Theme
The '''Epistle of Paul to the Romans''', often shortened to '''Romans''', is the sixth book in the [[New Testament]]. Biblical scholars agree that it was composed by the [[Apostle Paul ]] to explain that Salvation is offered through the [[Gospel ]] of Jesus Christ. It is by far the longest of the Pauline epistles, and is considered his "most important theological legacy".
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== Authorship and writing of the Gospel ==
The Epistle to the Romans is attributed to the [[Apostle Paul]] and was probably written between A.D. 55-57
 
== Background ==
 
== Major Theme ==
God's righteousness is revealed in Christ for our salvation. Righteousness is the essence of a faithful relationship for man with God and God offers this relationship through Christ.
 
== Outline ==
 
== Manuscripts ==
 
== References ==
 
 
== Sources ==
 
== Orthodox Reading material ==
 
[[Category:Epistle to the Romans|MAIN ARTICLE]]
[[Category:Scripture]]
[[Category:New Testament]]
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