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In the Bible, there is a drama of defining who are truly God's
people and who are not. Using an array of biblical texts from both
the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, Not God's People explores
how ancient Jews and Christians created their own identity in
relation to others. The book analyzes how biblical texts define
'us' and 'them, ' how these texts differ in the way they define
group identity, and how this process continues to be re-created by
Jews and Christians today. Not God's People asks questions such as:
How is the outsider defined? Is the ideal insider defined as the
opposite of the outsider? It follows up with related questions such
as: How were these definitions of 'we' and 'other' in the ancient
communities used by later Jews and Christians? Are the processes of
community and enemy formation found in the Bible exhibited in most
other cultures as well? Not God's People ultimately shows that
though the Bible's definitions of the insider and outsider changes
dramatically over time, the process are enduring, and eternally
true.
In the Bible, there is a drama of defining who are truly God's
people and who are not. Using an array of biblical texts from both
the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, Not God's People explores
how ancient Jews and Christians created their own identity in
relation to others. The book analyzes how biblical texts define
'us' and 'them, ' how these texts differ in the way they define
group identity, and how this process continues to be re-created by
Jews and Christians today. Not God's People asks questions such as:
How is the outsider defined? Is the ideal insider defined as the
opposite of the outsider? It follows up with related questions such
as: How were these definitions of 'we' and 'other' in the ancient
communities used by later Jews and Christians? Are the processes of
community and enemy formation found in the Bible exhibited in most
other cultures as well? Not God's People ultimately shows that
though the Bible's definitions of the insider and outsider changes
dramatically over time, the process are enduring, and eternally
true."
First Published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Building on the success of the Jewish Annotated New Testament
(JANT) and the Jewish Study Bible (JSB), Oxford University Press
now proceeds to complete the trilogy with the Jewish Annotated
Apocrypha (JAA). The books of the Apocrypha were virtually all
composed by Jewish writers in the Second Temple period. Excluded
from the Hebrew Bible, these works were preserved by Christians.
Yet no complete, standalone edition of these works has been
produced in English with an emphasis on Jewish tradition or with an
educated Jewish audience in mind. The JAA meets this need. The JAA
differs from prior editions of the Apocrypha in a number of ways.
First, as befits a Jewish Annotated Apocrypha, the volume excludes
certain texts that are widely agreed to be of Christian origin.
Second, it expands the scope of the volume to include Jubilees, an
essential text for understanding ancient Judaism, and a book that
merits inclusion in the volume by virtue of the fact that it was
long considered part of the canon of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church
(the text is also revered by Ethiopian Jews). Third, it has
restructured the order of the books so that the sequencing follows
the logic that governs the order of the books in the Jewish canon
(Law, History, Prophecy, Wisdom and Poetry). Each book of the
Apocrypha is annotated by a recognized expert in the study of
ancient Judaism. An Introduction by the editors guides readers
though the making of the volume and its contents. Thematic essays
by an impressive array of scholars provide helpful contexts,
backgrounds and elaborations on key themes.
An ambitious introduction to the Apocrypha that encourages readers
to reimagine what "canon" really means Challenging the way
Christian and non-Christian readers think about the Apocrypha, this
is an ambitious introduction to the deuterocanonical texts of the
Christian Old Testaments. Lawrence Wills introduces these texts in
their original Jewish environment while addressing the very
different roles they had in various Christian canons. Though often
relegated to a lesser role, a sort of "Bible-Lite," these texts
deserve renewed attention, and this book shows how they hold more
interest for both ancient and contemporary communities than
previously thought.
This volume brings together for the first time all of the ancient Jewish novels and fragments of novels. Written at about the same time as the Dead Sea Scrolls and the New Testament, but before the period of Rabbinic Judaism, these texts reveal the ambiguities and conflicts encountered by Jews in this period.
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