The Disciples New Testament,
the Galilean Edition

The Disciples New Testament, the Galilean Edition is printed on demand. It is on standard 8.5 by 11 inch paper, in velo bind, with black vinyl on both sides. It contains the Four Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, the Acts of the Apostles, Paul's Letters to the Romans, Corinthians 1 & 2, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Thessalonians 1 & 2, Timothy 1 & 2, Titus, Philemon, Hebrews, the Letter of James, the Letters of Peter 1 & 2, the Letters of John, the Letter of Jude, and Revelation.
This is the complete edition with footnotes, priced at $100 (includes shipping). The Disciples New Testament is 267 pages, see sample page, then click your browser button to come back to this page for ordering: Sample Page from the Gospel of Mark. To order by personal check or money order, send payment to:
Vic Alexander, translator
827 Hollywood Way #70
Burbank, CA 91505 USA
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Other books available from Amazon.com

[Disciples New Testament, American Edition, on Amazon.com]
The Disciples New Testament is now available from Amazon.com
-- This is the American Edition, which is identical to the Galilean Edtition, except it is without the footnotes (the footnotes have been incorporated into the text) and there are no chapter and verse numbers, just like the original manuscripts. This feature allows for uniterrupted reading of the Gospels. Click on the picture and order it from Amazon.com.


The Disciples New Testament deals with how a human being lives and dies in this world and how nothing makes any sense in the end, all the pleasures, sorrows, struggles and triumphs; everyone who is born must die, except for the one who always was, always is and always will be. That one is only Jesus, who can reverse the process and return the human being to freedom and innocence.

[Book of Genesis on Amazon.com]
The Book of Genesis is called "Breetah" in Aramaic
, or "Creation" in English. This is a fresh translation into English from the original Ancient Aramaic original sources. There are commentaries and footnotes included. Click on the picture and order it.


The Book of Genesis deals with how a human being is born innocent and free, how he comes to terms with the world around him, how he fights for his rights, learns from his mistakes, becomes self-sufficient, relying on himself and not on God, and then how he becomes frustrated with everything and throws it all away and chooses to become a slave for the sake of a piece of bread and a place to live.

[Book of Exodus on Amazon.com]
The Book of Exodus should have been called "Liberation,"
because that is what God did for the Israelites, He liberated them from slavery. Again, this Book has been translated from the Ancient Aramaic original sources. There are footnotes. Click on the picture and order it.


The Book of Exodus deals with how a human being, after he has lived as a slave for the sake of a piece of bread and a place to live, decides that slavery is intolerable and throws everything away and follows in the path of freedom, even if it means living in a wilderness for forty years, and then he learns the value of discipline and obedience to God.


[Book of Jeremiah on Amazon.com] Order the Book of Jeremiah from Amazon.com

This is a translation of the Book of Jeremiah the Prophet of the Old Testament from the Ancient Aramaic Scriptures of the Ancient Church of the East. This is a very significant prophetic Book of the Scriptures. Jeremiah is the other half of the story of the preparation of the Nation of Israel for the Coming of the Messiah. The first half is the story of Moses and the Law. These two prophets, Moses and Jeremiah, are essential to an understanding of the Creator's plan for humanity. Until now the Western Churches have taught that the Law was given through Moses, but now it is clear that the New Covenant is prophesied through Jeremiah. Jesus would be coming as a Jew and the nation was being disciplined. That is why the Western theologians took an axe to Jeremiah, because his prophecies would put an end to their claim that "the kingdom was taken from the Jews and given to the Gentiles." It is clear according to Jeremiah's prophecies and their fulfillment that not only Jesus would come as a Jew but that the entire Jewish nation would embrace him. In fact, the only ones who rejected him were a handful of scribes and high priests, those whose positions were directly threatened by Jesus, and King Herod whose authority would be questioned. However, Jesus would not be coming as a king of this world, and that fact also is clarified by the Book of Jeremiah.

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