1 and 2 Corinthians were written to the church at Corinth.
in the new testament St.Paul wrote 2 letters to the Corinthians!! :) good stuff
For starters, they were both written by the Apostle Paul.
Kenneth J. Foreman has written: 'The Letter of Paul to the Romans/the First Letter of Paul to the Corinthians/the Second Letter of Paul to the Corinthians (The Layman's Bible Comment)'
J. Hering has written: 'The first epistle of Saint Paul to the Corinthians'
Mitzi Minor has written: 'Second Corinthians' -- subject(s): Commentaries, Bible
A:No. Acts of the Apostles is a sequel to Luke's Gospel and is often thought of as a history of the early Church. Perhaps it could better be regarded as an epic written in the style of a historical novel. An epistle is simply another name for a letter.
one was written to the Romans the other to the corinthians. read the letters in their original context to find what they mean to us today
AnswerCorinth is a city in Greece. In the New Testament, there are two letters, or epistles, from Paul to the Corinthians: known as 1 Corinthians and 2 Corinthians.
AnswerThe Second Epistle to Timothy is traditionally believed to have been written by Paul from Rome. However, it is reported that scholars are almost unanimous in believing that this is one of the 'pseudo-Pauline' epistles written in Paul's name long after his death.If the epistle was only written to appear to have been written by Paul himself, we can not be certain where the real author wrote 2 Timothy from.
A:Yes. A computer analysis shows that 1 Corinthians has the same writng style as Galatians, which is generally used as the benchmark for genuine Pauline epistles. The consensus of scholars is that Romans, 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, Philemon, Galatians, Philippians and 1 Thessalonians were all written by Paul.
1 Corinthians was written about a.d. 55 or 56. Paul says he is writing from Ephesus (1Cor 16:8-9, cf. v. 1Cor 16:19). Presumably chapter 14 was written at the same time.
II Corinthians, like all of the books of the New Testament, was written in classical Greek.