Difference between revisions of "Onesimus, Christ's Freedman (1882 Abbott), novel"

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Onesimus remembers his friendship with Paul and his personal experiences as a Christian in various localities, including Lystra, Colossae, Antioch, Athens, Corinth, and Rome, roughly, between 46 and 86 CE. Second of three novels on Christian origins by the author. Preceded  by [[Philochristus]] (1878), followed by [[Silanus, the Christian]] (1906).
Onesimus remembers his friendship with Paul and his personal experiences as a Christian in various localities, including Lystra, Colossae, Antioch, Athens, Corinth, and Rome, roughly, between 46 and 86 CE. Second of three novels on Christian origins by the author. Preceded  by [[Philochristus]] (1878), followed by [[Silanus, the Christian]] (1906).


==Editions and translations==
==Editions ==
Published in London (Macmillan, 1882) and Boston.  
Published in London (Macmillan, 1882) and Boston.  


[[Category:1882| Abbott]]
[[Category:1882| Abbott]]
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[[Category:Fiction--English|1882 Abbott]]
[[Category:Fiction--English|1882 Abbott]]


[[Category:Literature|1882 Abbott]]
[[Category:Literature--1850s|1882 Abbott]]
[[Category:Literature--English|1882 Abbott]]
 
[[Category:Novels|1882 Abbott]]
[[Category:Novels|1882 Abbott]]


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[[Category:Onesimus (subject)|1882 Abbott]]
[[Category:Onesimus (subject)|1882 Abbott]]
[[Category:Onesimus--fiction (subject)|1882 Abbott]]
 
[[Category:Onesimus--literature (subject)|1882 Abbott]]
[[Category:Onesimus--literature (subject)|1882 Abbott]]

Latest revision as of 06:30, 6 August 2017

Onesimus, Christ's Freedman: Memoirs of a Disciple of St. Paul (1882) is a novel by Edwin A. Abbott

Abstract

Onesimus remembers his friendship with Paul and his personal experiences as a Christian in various localities, including Lystra, Colossae, Antioch, Athens, Corinth, and Rome, roughly, between 46 and 86 CE. Second of three novels on Christian origins by the author. Preceded by Philochristus (1878), followed by Silanus, the Christian (1906).

Editions

Published in London (Macmillan, 1882) and Boston.