| DIVISIONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.       The general divisions of the New Testament 
	are well known. The four Gospels are biographical; Acts of the Apostles is 
	historical; the Epistles, as their name indications, are epistolary, and the 
	Revelation, or the Apocalypse as scholars generally prefer to style it, is 
	descriptive and prophetic.        The Gospels do not pretend to give a 
	complete biography of Christ; but only a few such facts in his career as 
	serve to establish his claim to be the Christ the Son of God; and a few 
	specimens of his teaching and his predictions. One of them declares the 
	first to be its purpose (John xxx: 31), and the contents of the others show 
	that the same is true of them. John also shows the fragmentary character of 
	his narrative by saying, in hyperbolical terms, that if all that Jesus did 
	should be written, he [91]
 
  
 supposes that the world itself could not contain the books that would be 
	written. (xxi: 25.)        The book of Acts is a general history of the 
	church for about thirty years from its beginning; the Epistles are 
	communications from certain of the Apostles, that is, from Paul, James, 
	Peter, Jude, and John, all addressed to churches or to individual 
	Christians; and the Apocalypse sets forth in the main the destiny of the 
	church.   |