Christian Identity in the Jewish and Graeco Roman World

Christian Identity in the Jewish and Graeco Roman World
Author: Judith Lieu,Professor of New Testament Studies Judith M Lieu
Publsiher: Oxford University Press on Demand
Total Pages: 381
Release: 2004-05-27
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780199262892

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Judith Lieu's study explores how a sense of being a Christian was shaped within the setting of the Jewish and Graeco-Roman world. By exploring this theme she reveals what made early Christianity so distinctive and separate.

Jewish Identity in the Greco Roman World

Jewish Identity in the Greco Roman World
Author: Jörg Frey,Daniel R. Schwartz,Stephanie Gripentrog
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 444
Release: 2007
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9789004158382

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The book addresses critical issues of the formation and development of Jewish identity in the late Second Temple period. How could Jewish identity be defined? What about the status of women and the image of 'others'? And what about its ongoing influence in early Christianity?

Jewish and Christian Communal Identities in the Roman World

Jewish and Christian Communal Identities in the Roman World
Author: Yair Furstenberg
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 298
Release: 2016-06-21
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9789004321694

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The studies in this volume examine the unique communal patterns among Jews and Christians within Roman civic culture and their diverse responses to shared challenges under Imperial rule.

Christian Identity in the Jewish and Graeco Roman World ebook

Christian Identity in the Jewish and Graeco Roman World  ebook
Author: Judith Lieu
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 370
Release: 2004
Genre: Church history
ISBN: OCLC:753764126

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Judith Lieu's study explores how a sense of being a Christian was shaped within the setting of the Jewish and Graeco-Roman world. By exploring this theme she reveals what made early Christianity so distinctive and separate.

Neither Jew nor Greek

Neither Jew nor Greek
Author: Judith Lieu
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2015-11-19
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780567658821

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A ground-breaking study in the formation of early Christian identity, by one of the world's leading scholars.In Neither Jew Nor Greek, Judith Lieu explores the formation and shaping of early Christian identity within Judaism and within the wider Graeco-Roman world in the period before 200 C.E. Lieu particularly examines the way that literary texts presented early Christianity. She combines this with interdisciplinary historical investigation and interaction with scholarship on Judaism in late Antiquity and on the Graeco-Roman world.The result is a highly significant contribution to four of the key questions in current New Testament scholarship: how did early Christian identity come to be formed? How should we best describe and understand the processes by which the Christian movement became separate from its Jewish origins? Was there anything special or different about the way women entered Judaism and early Christianity? How did martyrdom contribute to the construction of early Christian identity? The chapters in this volume have become classics in the study of the New Testament and for this Cornerstones edition Lieu provides a new introduction placing them within the academic debate as it is now.

Dynamics of Identity in the World of the Early Christians

Dynamics of Identity in the World of the Early Christians
Author: Philip A. Harland
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2009-11-19
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780567457363

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This study sheds new light on identity formation and maintenance in the world of the early Christians by drawing on neglected archaeological and epigraphic evidence concerning associations and immigrant groups and by incorporating insights from the social sciences. The study's unique contribution relates, in part, to its interdisciplinary character, standing at the intersection of Christian Origins, Jewish Studies, Classical Studies, and the Social Sciences. It also breaks new ground in its thoroughly comparative framework, giving the Greek and Roman evidence its due, not as mere background but as an integral factor in understanding dynamics of identity among early Christians. This makes the work particularly well suited as a text for courses that aim to understand early Christian groups and literature, including the New Testament, in relation to their Greek, Roman, and Judean contexts. Inscriptions pertaining to associations provide a new angle of vision on the ways in which members in Christian congregations and Jewish synagogues experienced belonging and expressed their identities within the Greco-Roman world. The many other groups of immigrants throughout the cities of the empire provide a particularly appropriate framework for understanding both synagogues of Judeans and groups of Jesus-followers as minority cultural groups in these same contexts. Moreover, there were both shared means of expressing identity (including fictive familial metaphors) and peculiarities in the case of both Jews and Christians as minority cultural groups, who (like other "foreigners") were sometimes characterized as dangerous, alien "anti-associations". By paying close attention to dynamics of identity and belonging within associations and cultural minority groups, we can gain new insights into Pauline, Johannine, and other early Christian communities.

Gentile Christian Identity from Cornelius to Constantine

Gentile Christian Identity from Cornelius to Constantine
Author: Terence L. Donaldson
Publsiher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Total Pages: 748
Release: 2020-11-05
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781467459556

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Originally an ascribed identity that cast non-Jewish Christ-believers as an ethnic other, “gentile” soon evolved into a much more complex aspect of early Christian identity. Gentile Christian Identity from Cornelius to Constantine is a full historical account of this trajectory, showing how, in the context of “the parting of the ways,” the early church increasingly identified itself as a distinctly gentile and anti-Judaic entity, even as it also crafted itself as an alternative to the cosmopolitan project of the Roman Empire. This process of identity construction shaped Christianity’s legacy, paradoxically establishing it as both a counter-empire and a mimicker of Rome’s imperial ideology. Drawing on social identity theory and ethnography, Terence Donaldson offers an analysis of gentile Christianity that is thorough and highly relevant to today’s discourses surrounding identity, ethnicity, and Christian-Jewish relations. As Donaldson shows, a full understanding of the term “gentile” is key to understanding the modern Western world and the church as we know it.

Memory in Jewish Pagan and Christian Societies of the Graeco Roman World

Memory in Jewish  Pagan and Christian Societies of the Graeco Roman World
Author: Doron Mendels
Publsiher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 194
Release: 2004-06-14
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0567080447

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The ten studies in this book explore the phenomenon of public memory in societies of the Graeco-Roman period. Mendels begins with a concise discussion of the historical canon that emerged in Late Antiquity and brought with it the (distorted) memory of ancient history in Western culture. The following nine chapters each focus on a different source of collective memory in order to demonstrate the patchy and incomplete associations ancient societies had with their past, including discussions of Plato’s Politeia, a site of memory of the early church, and the dichotomy existing between the reality of the land of Israel in the Second Temple period and memories of it.Throughout the book, Mendels shows that since the societies of Antiquity had associations with only bits and pieces of their past, these associations could be slippery and problematic, constantly changing, multiplying and submerging. Memories, true and false, oral and inscribed, provide good evidence for this fluidity.