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The Fourth Gospel is at the same time a sublime work that has
inspired and enriched the faith of countless Christians and a
problematic text that has provided potent anti-Jewish imagery
exploited in anti-Jewish and anti-Semitic discourse over the course
of two millennia. The Fourth Gospel contains approximately 70
references to hoi ioudaioi, a designation most often (and best)
translated as "the Jews." Several of these references are neutral
or descriptive, referring to Jewish festivals or specific
practices, and some depict individual Jews or Jewish groups as
interested in Jesus' message. The vast majority, however, express a
negative or even hostile stance towards the Jews. These passages
express several themes that became central to Christian anti-Jewish
and anti-Semitic discourse. These include the charge of deicide -
killing God - and the claim that the Jews have the devil as their
father (8:44). The essays in this book address both the Gospel's
stance towards the Jews and the Gospel's impact on Jewish-Christian
relations from antiquity to the present day, in a range of media,
including sermons, iconography, art, music, and film. A short
volume of collected essays cannot hope to address the full history
of the Fourth Gospel's impact on Jewish-Christian relations.
Nevertheless, it is hoped that this volume will contribute to the
efforts of Christians and Jews alike to find ways to appreciate
what is good and life-affirming about the Gospel of John, while
also acknowledging the damaging impact of its portrayal of Jews as
the children of Satan and the killers of Christ. Only when
Christians disavow this portrayal can the Gospel of John continue
to be a true source of inspiration and perhaps even a path forward
in the relationships between Jews and Christians in the modern
world.
A collection of essays on John 6 illustrating various current
approaches to biblical interpretation. To understand this chapter,
one must deal with most of the issues that confront serious readers
of the Fourth Gospel. Historical issues and questions regarding the
composition of the Gospel, the nature of the Johannine community,
the literary design of the Gospel and its theology all come to
focus in a unique way in John 6. The essays in this volume are
written by ten of the leading Johannine scholars in America,
Australia, Europe and Scandinavia. The collection, therefore,
provides an overview of current Johannine scholarship and a
showcase for the various methodologies now being used in Gospel
studies.
The highly popular Sheffield New Testament Guides are being
reissued in a new format, grouped together and prefaced by one of
the best known of contemporary Johannine scholars. This new format
is designed to ensure that these authoritative introductions remain
up to date and accessible to seminary and university students of
the New Testament while offering a broader theological and literary
context for their study. Alan Culpepper introduces the Johannine
Writings as a whole, illuminating their distinctive historical and
theological features and their importance within the New Testament
canon.
In this volume, R. Alan Culpepper considers both the Gospel and
the Letters of John.
The book begins with a close look at the relationship between
John and the Synoptics and a summary of John's distinctive thought
and language. The second chapter addresses the fascinating issues
regarding the origins of the Gospel and the letters: authorship,
sources, and composition. The history of the Johannine community is
reviewed in chapter three. Chapter four interprets the plot of the
Gospel and prepares the student to read John as literature by
providing a brief orientation to narrative criticism.
The fifth chapter turns to more traditional concerns: John as
theology. This chapter provides a digest of the Christology,
theology, and eschatology of John. The sixth through the eighth
chapters, the heart of the book, guide the student through a
reading of the Gospel. The ninth chapter serves as an introduction
to the Letters, noting especially their relationship to the Gospel.
Each letter is treated in turn. The final chapter examines the
challenges and potential of the Johannine literature as documents
of faith.
"In previous writings Alan Culpepper has shown himself to be one
of the best Johannine scholars of our time. He not only
conveniently draws together his research but also shows himself to
be an excellent teacher." --Raymond E. Brown
Cornelis Bennema presents a new theory of characterization in the
New Testament literature. Although character has been the subject
of focused literary-critical study of the New Testament (and a
point of connection with "character ethics") since the 1970s,
Cornelis Bennema observes that there is still no consensus
regarding how characterization should be understood in contemporary
literary theory or in biblical studies. Many New Testament scholars
seem to presume that characters in Greco-Roman literature are
two-dimensional, "Aristotelian" figures, unlike the well-rounded,
psychologized individuals who appear in modern fiction. They
continue nevertheless to apply contemporary literary theory to
characters in ancient writings. Bennema here offers a full,
comprehensive, and non-reductionist theory for the analysis,
classification, and evaluation of characters in the New Testament.
Beginning with New Testament reports of John as fisherman and
extending through the most recent Johannine scholarship, Culpepper
gathers stories from church fathers, the apocryphal acts of John,
medieval sources, Victorian poets, and nineteenth-and
twentieth-century historians of earliest Christianity about the
exploits and the death of this apostle. Culpepper's sweeping study
examines a multitude of sources, many of which are widely dispersed
and not previously available in English. Culpepper reveals images
of John that suggest the power of historical tradition and legend.
The resulting study is one of the most important sources of
information about the development of Johannine legends, as well as
one of the most successful efforts to overcome barriers that have
traditionally separated New Testament exegesis from the study of
the history of Christianity.
In "Exploring the Gospel of John," scholars of international
standing gather to honor D. Moody Smith by examining the trails he
has blazed in Johannine scholarship. Every aspect of the study of
John is represented in this book, including the historical origins
of the Johannine community, the religious traditions in the gospel
within and beyond early Christianity, the Fourth Gospel's literary
dimensions and theological concerns, and the distinctive challenges
presented by the Gospel's interpretation. This book is
indispensable for all interested in the Fourth Gospel. For
researchers, it summarizes the modern history of Johannine
scholarship as it points the way for its advancement in the next
century. For pastors and students, it offers a comprehensive,
up-to-date, and reliable guide to this important New Testament
book.
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