Galatians
This introduction to the book of Galatians reports on the author, date and destination, occasion and purpose, theological teaching, and outline. Galatians stands as an eloquent and vigorous apologetic for the essential NT truth that people are justified by faith in Jesus Christ—by nothing less and nothing more—and that they are sanctified not by legalistic works but by the obedience that comes from faith in God’s work for them, in them and through them by the grace and power of Christ and the Holy Spirit.
http://biblica.com/niv/studybible/galatians.php
2 Corinthians
This introduction to the book of 2 Corinthians reports on the author, date, recipients, occasion, purposes, structure, unity, and outline. From the NIV Study Bible, Introductions.
http://biblica.com/niv/studybible/2corinthians.php
John
This introduction to the book of John reports on the title, author, outline, and date of writing. John’s Gospel is rather different from the other three. Whether or not he knew them (or any one of them) continues to be debated. In any event, his witness to Jesus goes its own way, highlighting matters that in the other Gospels remain implicit and underdeveloped.
http://biblica.com/niv/studybible/john.php
Luke
This introduction to the book of Luke reports on the title, author, outline, and date of writing. This Gospel is a companion volume to the book of Acts, and the language and structure of these two books indicate that both were written by the same person.
http://biblica.com/niv/studybible/luke.php
Mark
This introduction to the book of Mark reports on the title, author, outline, and date of writing. Since Mark’s Gospel is traditionally associated with Rome, it may have been occasioned by the persecutions of the Roman church in the period c. a.d. 64–67. The famous fire of Rome in 64—probably set by Nero himself but blamed on Christians—resulted in widespread persecution.
http://biblica.com/niv/studybible/mark.php
Acts
This introduction to the book of Acts reports on the title, author, outline, and date of writing. Although the author does not name himself, evidence outside the Scriptures and inferences from the book itself lead to the conclusion that the author was Luke.
http://biblica.com/niv/studybible/acts.php
Romans
This introduction to the book of Romans reports on the author, date and place of writing, recipients, major theme, purpose, occasion, content, special characteristics, and outline.
http://biblica.com/niv/studybible/romans.php
1 Corinthians
This introduction to the book of 1 Corinthians reports on the author, date and destination, occasion and purpose, theological teaching, and outline.
http://biblica.com/niv/studybible/1corinthians.php
Synoptic Gospels
A careful comparison of the four Gospels reveals that Matthew, Mark and Luke are noticeably similar, while John is quite different. The first three Gospels agree extensively in language, in the material they include, and in the order in which events and sayings from the life of Christ are recorded. [from the NIV Study Bible]
http://biblica.com/niv/studybible/synoptic_gospels.php
Zechariah :: Bible Word Search
Also known as "Zacharias" in the KJV. Search the Bible for Zechariah.
http://biblica.com/bible/word/index.php?word_request=Zechariah&selected_version_word=ni...