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Into the World of the New Testament: Greco-Roman and Jewish Texts and Contexts

Autor Dr Daniel Lynwood Smith
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 ian 2015
Daniel Lynwood Smith orients readers of the New Testament to its historical and cultural settings, introducing the cast of characters, and illuminating key concepts by exploring their use in ancient texts. Smith includes quotations from many primary sources including Josephus, Tacitus, the Qumran Community, Pliny the Younger, and other carefully chosen texts from lesser-known ancient sources. These texts are all carefully woven together with commentary, to provide a narrative framework for the material and guide students through the text. A glossary of complex terms is provided, to make everything as clear as possible for the newcomer to New Testament studies.This integrative approach both introduces the key sources to the reader and elaborates on their significance for understanding the New Testament. In an admirably concise format Smith is able to cover the military-political history of Israel-Palestine, the messianic movements of Second Temple Judaism, the ancient practice of crucifixion and the development of the Christian canon. Through immersion in these ancient Jewish, Christian, and Greco-Roman texts and contexts, contemporary readers take a step closer to experiencing the New Testament with first-century eyes and ears.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780567657022
ISBN-10: 0567657027
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 4 maps
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Focuses on key themes, concepts, and words/statements that all students of the New Testament need to come to grips with

Notă biografică

Daniel Lynwood Smith is Assistant Professor of New Testament at Saint Louis University, USA.

Cuprins

ContentsPrefaceChapter 1: What is the New Testament?Part 1: The SettingChapter 2: The Kingdom of... God?Chapter 3: When in RomePart 2: The Cast of CharactersChapter 4: John the Baptist and other Movers and ShakersChapter 5: A Virgin, a King, a High Priest, a Governor, and a RabbiChapter 6: Joshua the Carpenter's Son...or the Christ, the Son of God?Chapter 7: LearnersChapter 8: The JewsChapter 9: "I am a Jew"Part 3: Reading WordsChapter 10: The Crux of the MatterChapter 11: Faith(fulness)Chapter 12: Apocalypse ThenPost-Script: Loose CanonsGlossary: The Meaning of Words

Recenzii

Smith's book is very readable and informative. Its forte lies in an interesting presentation of the historical and socio-cultural background of the New Testament with a very helpful use of the relevant quotations from the ancient authors ... A valuable help for readers interested in the background of the New Testament.
This is an excellent book. In little more than two hundred pages of text Smith gives a most informative overview of the Greco-Roman and Jewish background to the New Testament ... A fascinating read, and it will surely provide a convenient and accessible source of study and preaching material to any priest or reader.
An excellent introduction to the cultural world of the New Testament for students, interested readers, and scholars. Concise, judicious, readable, innovative, informed, and rich in primary sources, the book reflects an author who is both an engaged scholar and a perceptive teacher.
Smith's introduction to the New Testament encourages engagement with the texts in their social and political contexts. This book provides a comprehensive, yet extremely user-friendly, resource, and little prior knowledge of the Bible, the Roman world or early Christianity is assumed. Useful features include a glossary of important and technical terms, all appearing in bold type throughout, and directive focus questions at the outset of each chapter.
This excellent work is easy to read, sensitive to the historically uninformed student, yet highly informative concerning the context of the NT. Drawing on particularly key sources, Smith also helpfully engages the reader with what is relevant to the interests that brought them to the study in the first place. The texts, reflecting the range of Jewish and other Greco-Roman sources, are judiciously chosen, reflecting the relevant period and spheres of influence. The narrative flow of Smith's work keeps the insights intriguing.
With this new book, Daniel Smith offers a fresh approach to the challenge of introducing students to the writings of the New Testament. Thoughtful attention to both text and context helps readers navigate the path into the cultural world of the New Testament, and from there to arrive at deeper, richer understanding of New Testament literature. Judicious probes of select interpretive questions and substantial excerpts from early Jewish and Greco-Roman texts familiarize readers with many of the "fascinating voices and artifacts" from the world that shaped the New Testament. Writing with clarity and verve, Daniel Smith takes readers on an intriguing and informative journey "Into the World of the New Testament," and back--and beyond. As a companion volume read in tandem with a Study Bible, this will be a valuable resource--heartily recommended!
In this introductory textbook on Greco-Roman and Jewish backgrounds designed to illuminate the New Testament in an introductory course which focuses on actually reading the New Testament itself, Daniel L. Smith has produced a remarkably well-structured and useful teaching tool. The book is extraordinarily well-written by an experienced teacher who knows how to engage students. With appropriate quotations from a wide variety of ancient texts in translation accompanied by basic bibliographies, the author provides an appropriate entré into the biblical texts. The volume concludes with an extensive glossary of terms, signaled in the text by printing important terms in boldface type. Everyone who teaches an introductory NT course should seriously consider using this text as a pedagogical aid.
This companion to the New Testament offers students an opportunity to read the New Testament intelligently. It is neither a substitute for reading the New Testament by summarizing it and the questions related to it nor a survey of the background of the New Testament. It is a judicious selection and commentary on ancient texts and their relevance to the basic issues of the New Testament. I heartily recommend it for use in introductory courses.