The Jewish Teachers of Jesus, James, and Jude
What Earliest Christianity Learned from the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
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A termék adatai:
- Kiadó OUP USA
- Megjelenés dátuma 2012. október 11.
- ISBN 9780195329001
- Kötéstípus Keménykötés
- Terjedelem360 oldal
- Méret 236x155x33 mm
- Súly 599 g
- Nyelv angol 0
Kategóriák
Rövid leírás:
Jews have sometimes been reluctant to claim Jesus as one of their own; Christians have often been reluctant to acknowledge the degree to which Jesus' message and mission were at home amidst, and shaped by, the Judaism(s) of the Second Temple Period. In The Jewish Teachers of Jesus, James, and Jude David deSilva introduces readers to the ancient Jewish writings known as the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha and examines their formative impact on the teachings and mission of Jesus and his half-brothers, James and Jude.
TöbbHosszú leírás:
Jews have sometimes been reluctant to claim Jesus as one of their own; Christians have often been reluctant to acknowledge the degree to which Jesus' message and mission were at home amidst, and shaped by, the Judaism(s) of the Second Temple Period. In The Jewish Teachers of Jesus, James, and Jude David deSilva introduces readers to the ancient Jewish writings known as the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha and examines their formative impact on the teachings and mission of Jesus and his half-brothers, James and Jude.
Knowledge of this literature, deSilva argues, helps to bridge the perceived gap between Jesus and Judaism when Judaism is understood only in terms of the Hebrew Bible (or ''Old Testament''), and not as a living, growing body of faith and practice. Where our understanding of early Judaism is limited to the religion reflected in the Hebrew Bible, Jesus will appear more as an outsider speaking ''against'' Judaism and introducing more that is novel. Where our understanding of early Judaism is also informed by the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, Jesus and his half-brothers appear more fully at home within Judaism, and giving us a more precise understanding of what is essential, as well as distinctive, in their proclamation.
This comparative study engages several critical issues. How can we recover the voices of Jesus, James, and Jude from the material purporting to preserve their speech? How can we assess a particular text's influence on Jews in early first-century Palestine? How can we be sufficiently sensitive to the meanings and nuances in both the text presumed to influence and the text presumed to be influenced so as not to distort the meaning of either? The result is a portrait of Jesus that is fully at home in Roman Judea and Galilee, and perhaps an explanation for why these extra-biblical Jewish texts continued to be preserved in Christian circles.
What deSilva offers, to put it less catchily than he does, is an admirably close intertextual study of links between, on the one hand, the voice (his term) heard in these letters and in the words of Jesus in the Gospels and, on the other hand, the voice heard in selected works of Jewish literature from the last pre-Christian centuries. This aspect of deSilvas serious and careful study is its major merit and principal claim to originality.
Tartalomjegyzék:
Introduction
Chapter One: Recovering the Voice of Jesus
Chapter Two: Recovering the Voices of James and Jude
Chapter Three: In the School of Ben Sira of Jerusalem
Chapter Four: The Book of Tobit: Life-Lessons From an Edifying Tale
Chapter Five: The Book of Enoch
Chapter Six: Military Messianism and Jesus' Mission: The Psalms of Solomon
Chapter Seven: Jewish Martyrology and the Death of Jesus: 2 Maccabees and the Lives of the Prophets
Chapter Eight: The Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs: A Legacy of Ethics and Eschatology for a New Generation
Chapter Nine: The Testament of Job: Job Becomes An Example of Patient Endurance
Conclusion: Jesus, James, and Jude among the Jewish Teachers
Notes
Bibliography
Index