New Testament: Galatians
from the King James Bible
23 minutes, 39 seconds
Unabridged Religous Work
First Century AD
The ninth book of the New Testament: the epistle of the apostle Paul to the Galatians. Paul argues that redemption comes from grace rather than as a reward for adherence to laws, "for if righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain."
Read by Alex Wilson.
Categories: 100 cents, 15-30 minutes, 2006 Release, Alex Wilson (Reader), King James Bible, Nonfiction, Religion
This recording will be released under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License on January 18, 2011 or after 100,000 purchases, whichever comes first. Read more.
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23 minutes, 39 seconds
Unabridged Religous Work
First Century AD
The ninth book of the New Testament: the epistle of the apostle Paul to the Galatians. Paul argues that redemption comes from grace rather than as a reward for adherence to laws, "for if righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain."
Read by Alex Wilson.
Categories: 100 cents, 15-30 minutes, 2006 Release, Alex Wilson (Reader), King James Bible, Nonfiction, Religion
The King James Bible was produced by a committee of scholars in 1611 as one of the first "sanctioned" Bible translations in any language. Less than a century earlier, the first printing of an English Bible translation by William Tyndale resulted in his execution in 1536.
Alex Wilson is a writer and stage/film actor from northern Ohio and now based in Carrboro, North Carolina. He starred in the North American Premiere of Richard Taylor's musical Whistle Down the Wind and recently filmed The Third Cord with Emmy-nominated director Jack Lucido. His animated comics-parody film All's Fair in Love and Police Actions was recently selected as an iFilm Pick. He is the founder of Telltale Weekly and Spoken Alexandria. See his website for more. [new windows, all].
This recording will be released under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License on January 18, 2011 or after 100,000 purchases, whichever comes first. Read more.
Posted by alex at January 18, 2006 4:23 PM


