The long-awaited Nestle-Aland Novum Testamentum Graece (29th edition) and the UBS Greek New Testament (6th edition) will be out in Oct 2025 (from German Bible Society; Amazon).
Reader’s edition that shares the same text is now also available for order (German Bible Society; Amazon).
A pdf excerpt of first 31 pages (intro + Mat 1--9) is free for preview.
Chained Paul might be, this joyful prisoner of the Lord never wrote
more warmly nor more wisely than in this letter to his friends in
Philippi. Yet the apostle is not blind to faults, even of loyal brethren
for whom he has a special affection. Evidently there was some
dissension in this lively Christian community, due to personal
jealousies and animosities. Unfortunately, the same can be just as true
today. The Gospel is still at times preached from motives of selfish
ambition and rivalry. All of us are still inclined to look after our own
interests only. And fine Christian workers are still quarreling. This
letter serves as a firm word of warning and a guide for right living.
Most of the works of St. Augustine of Hippo (354–430) have been
extant and studied for centuries by Christians throughout the world.
Since this Doctor of the Western Church has long been the best known and
most widely read of the Latin Fathers, it is so much more unexpected
that a previously unknown work should be found. Johannes Divjak found
not only a single work but in fact a whole collection of letters, which
he published in a critical Latin edition in 1980.
This volume contains the first English translation of these newly
discovered letters. The letters range in size from short memoranda to
long treatises on various subjects. In addition, there are three other
previously unknown letters: two written to Augustine by Consentius, a
North African rhetorician, and one written by Saint Jerome to Aurelius
of Carthage.