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Receptions of Paul during the First Two Centuries: Exploration of
the Jewish Matrix of Early Christianity examines the historical
context of Paul and the way Paul’s Jewish heritage was received.
Contributors take into consideration the aftermath of the Jewish
War and its impact on the development of the Jesus movement and
early Christian-Jewish relations in the following period. The
chapters come to the conclusion that after the Jewish War, the
reception of the authentic Paul was transformed more and more into
the tradition about Paul, based and established by the second and
third generations of Jesus-believing Gentiles, which perceived Paul
as a convert from what is labeled “Judaism”
(Ἰουδαϊσμός) to the complete opposite of it,
“Christianity” (Χριστιανισμός).
Noting that a traditional understanding of Paul as “convert”
from Judaism has fueled false and often dangerous stereotypes of
Judaism, and that the so-called “new perspective on Paul” has
not completely escaped these stereotypes, František Ábel has
gathered leading international scholars to test the hypotheses of
the more recent “Paul within Judaism” movement. Though hardly
monolithic in their approach, these scholars’ explorations of
specific topics concerning Second Temple Judaism and Paul’s
message and theology allow a contextually more nuanced
understanding of the apostle’s thought, one free from particular
biases rooted in unacknowledged ideologies and traditional
interpretations transmitted by particular church traditions.
Contributors include František Ábel, Michael Bachmann, Daniel
Boyarin, William S. Campbell, Kathy Ehrensperger, Paula Fredriksen,
Jörg Frey, Joshua Garroway, Karl-Wilhelm Niebuhr, Isaac W. Oliver,
Shayna Sheinfeld, and J. Brian Tucker.
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