New Covenant Studies
A structured, literal–literary exploration of the apostolic writings — hearing their rhetoric, triads, creeds, and doxologies as living text.
Synoptic Gospels & Acts
Three narrative witnesses plus the Spirit's mission through the apostles.
Jesus as Davidic/Mosaic fulfiller; Torah intensified.
Earliest narrative tradition; often tied to Peter's testimony.
Orderly account for Theophilus; table fellowship and reversals.
The risen Lord's work by the Spirit from Jerusalem to the ends of the earth.
📝 Note: The Gospel of John appears in the Johannine Corpus.
Paul — Missionary Correspondence
Letters tied to the recorded journeys in Acts (13–21).
Early mission letter from the Galatian context.
Macedonian–Achaian mission: holiness, resurrection, generosity.
Late mission letters culminating in the Rome vision.
Pastoral & Prison Letters
Late Pauline phase: mentorship, maturity, unity, and suffering for the gospel.
Circular letter from imprisonment. Note: Ephesus connection (corpus context).
Joy and partnership in the gospel under chains.
Christ's supremacy; language overlap with Ephesians.
Appeal for a brother — personal, pastoral, and profound.
Leadership, healthy doctrine, and moral triads; Ephesus setting.
A final charge: share in suffering, fulfill your ministry.
Set in order what remains; appoint elders; adorn the doctrine.
Petrine & Jude (with Mark)
Tradition links Mark's Gospel to Peter's testimony; grouped with 1–2 Peter & Jude.
Holy conduct amid trials; priestly people identity.
Grow in grace and knowledge; patience with the Lord's timing.
Keep yourselves in God's love; mercy on those who doubt.
📝 Note: Mark is cross-referenced here as the Petrine narrative source.
Johannine Corpus
The Word made flesh, the beloved community, and the victory of the Lamb.
The Word made flesh; belief through signs; high-priestly prayer.
Fellowship, confession, love, and true knowledge of the Son.
Hospitality & boundaries; imitate what is good.
The unveiling of Jesus Christ; faithful witness under empire.
General Epistles & One‑offs
Non-Pauline letters and stand-alone works, including Hebrews.
About the Structured Edition Method
These New Covenant studies use the Literal–Literary Translation Structure Edition (LLTSE)—a formatting approach that reveals Greek rhetoric through indentation, lineation, and spacing. Instead of pressing triads and creeds into paragraphs, the layout makes structure visible so you can see what ancient audiences heard.
Learn about the methodology →