J. Rendel Harris is one of a handful of scholars who left a significant mark on the study of early Christian literature. He took on topics that most conventional scholars would not approach, with results that remain unsurpassed to this day. Two such works are represented in this pamphlet. The first is his treatise Justin Martyr and Menander for "Evergreen Essays," 1932, in which he discusses the influence of the Greek poet and other classical writers on the second-century apologist. Then taking this information and examining the epistles of Paul, he finds a similar influence. From this research Harris concludes that there was an early book of Christian excerpts from the Greek poets and philosophers. To this work is appended a brief treatise by Harris in which he proves undeniably the authenticity of the Byrennios manuscript, from which the Didache, Clement of Rome, the Epistle of Barnabas, and Ignatian epistles were taken. This he accomplishes by providing photographic evidence from various pages of the codex itself.
