Updating Basket....

Sign In
0 Items

BASKET SUMMARY

There are currently no items added to the basket
Sign In
0 Items

BASKET SUMMARY

There are currently no items added to the basket

This item is currently unavailable.

Enter your email address below and we will email you when the item comes into stock.

Hardback

£80.00

Publisher: Baylor University Press
ISBN: 9781481310994
Number of Pages: 820
Published: 30/10/2019
Width: 16.5 cm
Height: 23.5 cm
The debate over the extent of Jewish influence upon early Christianity rages on. At the heart of this argument lies the question of Jesus: how does the fate of a first-century Galilean Jew inspire and determine the nature, shape, and practices of a distinct religious movement? Vital to this first question is another equally challenging one: can the four Gospels be used to reconstruct the historical Jesus? In Jesus and Judaism, Martin Hengel and Anna Maria Schwemer seek to untangle the complex relationships among Jesus, Judaism, and the Gospels in the earliest Christian movement.

Jesus and Judaism, the first in a four-volume series, focuses on the person of Jesus in the context of Judaism. Beginning with his Galilean origin, the volume analyzes Jesus' relationship with John the Baptist and the Jewish context of Jesus' life and work. Hengel and Schwemer argue that there never was a nonmessianic Jesus. Rather, his messianic claim finds expression in his relationship to the Baptist, his preaching in authority, his deeds of power, and his crucifixion as king of the Jews, and in the emergence of the earliest Christology. As Hengel and Schwemer reveal, Jesus was not only a devout Jew, nor merely a miracle worker, but the essential part of the earliest form of Christianity.

Hengel and Schwemer insist that Jesus belongs within the history of early Christianity, rather than as its presupposition. Christianity did not begin after Jesus' death; Christianity began as soon as a Jew from Galilee started to preach the word of God.

Not for sale in Europe.
  • Preliminary Observations
  • 1. The Overall Temporal and Thematic Framework for a History of Early Christianity
  • 2. Judaism and Early Christianity
  • Part One: Judaism
  • 3. Judaism under Roman Rule in the First Century BCE and CE
  • 4. The Jewish Religious Parties in Palestine
  • Part Two: Preliminary Questions about the Person and History of Jesus
  • 5. On the Quest for Jesus of Nazareth
  • 6. The Sources
  • 7. The Historical Quest
  • Part Three: Jesus the Galilean and John the Baptist
  • 8. Jesus the Galilean
  • 9. John the Baptist
  • 10. Jesus and His Forerunner
  • Part Four: Jesus' Activity and Proclamation
  • 11. On the Geographical-Historical Framework of the Activity of Jesus
  • 12. The Poetic Form of the Proclamation of Jesus
  • 13. Jesus' Proclamation of the Kingdom of God
  • 14. The Will of God
  • 15. The Fatherly Love of God
  • Part Five: Jesus' Authority and Messianic Claim
  • 16. The Prophetic-Messianic Miracle Worker
  • 17. Prophet or Messiah?
  • Part Six: The Passion of Jesus
  • 18. The Last Confrontation in Jerusalem
  • 19. The Preparation of the Passion of Jesus
  • 20. Gethsemane, Arrest, and Interrogation of Jesus
  • 21. The Crucified Messiah
  • Part Seven: The Testimony to the Resurrection of Jesus
  • 22. The Testimony to the Resurrection of Jesus
  • Retrospect and Prospect

    Martin Hengel, Anna Maria Schwemer, Wayne Coppins

    Martin Hengel (1926-2009) was Professor of New Testament and Early Judaism at the Protestant Theology Faculty at the University of Tübingen.

    Anna Maria Schwemer is Professor of New Testament at the Protestant Theology Faculty at the University of Tübingen.

    Wayne Coppins is Professor of Religion at the University of Georgia.