Luke Johnson here issues a provocative call for a radically new
direction in New Testament studies that can change the way we have
viewed the entire phenomenon of early Christianity.
Johnson is convinced that the dominant ways of studying early
Christianity tend to miss its specifically religious character,
because of a disjunction between formal religion and "popular"
religion. He proposes in this book, by means of three case studies
-- baptism, glossolalia, and meals -- to show how a more holistic,
phenomenological approach can be made. This makes possible the
inclusion in the study of early Christianity the world of healings
and religious power, of ecstasy and spirit -- in short, the
religious experience of real persons.
It is this subtle yet real presence of religious experience that
alters the discipline and practice of New Testament scholarship, as
Johnson notes: "This is neither history in the strict sense of the
term, nor is it theology. That's the whole point: we need a new way
of looking in order to see what we can't otherwise see. If I have
succeeded at least in whetting an appetite for getting at what
these chapters try to get at, I am content, for what they try to
get at is important."
Johnson concludes that there is still much to be learned about
early Christianity as a religion, if we can find a way to get at
the category of real experience. He maintains that early Christian
texts reflect lives that are caught up by and defined by a power
not in their control but controlled instead by the crucified and
raised Messiah Jesus.
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