Untitled Sermon (4)
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Finally, regard the references to other secondary literature as invitations for further study at points of interest or need. Within the text of this volume I have occasionally cited a book either as the source of a particular perspective or as an especially helpful treatment of the subject under discussion, offering to anyone who is so inclined the opportunity to do more detailed investigation. The citations are in parentheses and mention only author, title, and page. That is sufficient to lead the reader to the Selected Bibliography at the end of this volume, where the full entries are found. The sources to which I am indebted for my own understanding far exceed the references in the text, and I have tried to make available in these pages the best of that material. In the selections that do appear, I have been guided by two principles. First, it is not helpful to fill the reader’s study with strangers, all of them intimidating experts. More learning occurs when one is seated among a few seasoned and clear scholars. Second, references are helpful if they are in the reader’s language and accessible in bookstores and libraries. Usually readers with more or different appetites already have the initiative and the means for satisfying them.