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Ancient Jewish Letters and the Beginnings of Christian Epistolography (Hardcover)
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Ancient Jewish Letters and the Beginnings of Christian Epistolography (Hardcover)
Series: Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament, 298
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Ancient Jewish letter writing is a neglected topic of research.
Lutz Doering's new monograph seeks to redress this situation. The
author pursues two major tasks: first, to provide a comprehensive
discussion of Jewish letter writing in the Persian, Hellenistic,
and Roman periods and, second, to assess the importance of ancient
Jewish letter writing for the emergence and early development of
Christian epistolography. Although individual groups of Jewish
letters have been studied before, the present monograph is the
first one to look at Jewish letters comprehensively across the
languages in which they were written and/or handed down (chiefly
Aramaic, Hebrew, and Greek). It operates with a broad concept of
"letter" and deals with documentary as well as literary and
embedded letters. The author highlights cross-linguistic
developments, such as the influence of the Greek epistolary form on
Aramaic and Hebrew letters or the non-idiomatic retention of
Semitic "peace" greetings in some letters translated into Greek,
which allowed for these greetings to be charged with new meaning.
Doering argues that such processes were also important for early
Christian epistolography. Thus, Paul engaged creatively with Jewish
epistolary formulae. Frequent address of communities rather than
individuals and the quasi-official setting of many Jewish letters
would have provided relevant models when Paul developed his own
epistolary praxis. In addition, the author shows that the concept
of communication with the "Diaspora", in both
halakhic-administrative and prophetic-apocalyptic Jewish letters,
is adapted by a number of early Christian letters, such as 1 Peter,
James, Acts 15:23-29, and 1 Clement. Ancient Jewish and early
Christian letters also share a concern with group identity and
cohesion that is often supported by salvation-historical motifs. In
sum, Lutz Doering addresses the previously under-researched
text-pragmatic similarities between Jewish and Christian letters.
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