Reinventing Paul
Autor John G. Gageren Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 mai 2002
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780195150858
ISBN-10: 0195150856
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 213 x 140 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0195150856
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 213 x 140 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
In forcing a reconsideration of the second-most-pivotal figure in the history of Christianity, Gager has done a great service.
A remarkable experience....Gager's careful rereading of famous texts is both mind-bending and eye-opening. One actually feels one's habits of mind changing as one reads Paul's writings over Gager's shoulder.
Relevant beyond the precincts of Christianity and Judaism....Gager makes an important contribution to Jewish-Christian dialogue and offers a richer conception of Paul than the one that has guided many who have struggled with him over the centuries.
In this lucid overview of recent scholarship on the theology of the Apostle to the Gentiles, Princeton theologian Gager challenges the received view of Paul as a convert from Judaism to Christianity who rejected the law of Moses and taught that God was replacing the people of Israel with a new Israel, the Christian church.
The argument makes sense, on both logical and intuitive levels. Only a post-hoc reading of Paul could have led to the conclusion that he was a fervent Christian bent on persecuting the Jews. By giving us instead a Jewish Paul bent on rescuing the Gentiles, Gager shows that 1st century Judaism wasn't an insular sect but a proselytizing faith. This interpretation effectively removes anti-Semitism from the Bible...In forcing a reconsideration of the second-most-pivotal figure in the history of Christianity, Gager has done a great service.
It took the 20th century to see that Paul meant it when he said that he was Apostle to the Gentiles
Anti-Judaism has long served a fundamental role in the construction of Christian identity. As John Gager argued in his earlier study, The Origins of Anti-Semitism (1983), this identity resulted not from the missions of Jesus or Paul in the first century, but from the ways in which later Christians interpreted these figures during the second, third, and fourth centuries. Extending the trajectory of his argument, Gager dissolves the Paul of later Gentile theologies and constructs in his stead a first-century Jewish visionary and apostle of apocalyptic hope. Anyone interested in Christian origins, in New Testament interpretation, or in new possibilities for interfaith dialogue will find his essay compelling and convincing.
My Paul has always been a pious, pompous, and somewhat inconsistent Christian, alternately displaying the anger of Jeremiah, the vision of Isaiah, and the ego of Douglas MacArthur. Gager's Paul is pre-Christian, a Jew who believed in Jesus as the Messiah who came to fulfill, not to destroy, the Law. Paul's message, Gager contends, was written for Gentiles of the first century, not for the Church of Augustine, sixteenth-century Protestant reformers, or post-Holocaust moderns. Gager's argument from text and context is always careful, learned, clear, and courageous
In his thoughtful, incisive, and lucidly written book, John Gager presents a radical challenge to the way that people have read Paul for 2000 years. Reinventing Paul is essential reading for anyone concerned with the history of religion and the relationship between Jews and Christians.
A remarkable experience....Gager's careful rereading of famous texts is both mind-bending and eye-opening. One actually feels one's habits of mind changing as one reads Paul's writings over Gager's shoulder.
Relevant beyond the precincts of Christianity and Judaism....Gager makes an important contribution to Jewish-Christian dialogue and offers a richer conception of Paul than the one that has guided many who have struggled with him over the centuries.
In this lucid overview of recent scholarship on the theology of the Apostle to the Gentiles, Princeton theologian Gager challenges the received view of Paul as a convert from Judaism to Christianity who rejected the law of Moses and taught that God was replacing the people of Israel with a new Israel, the Christian church.
The argument makes sense, on both logical and intuitive levels. Only a post-hoc reading of Paul could have led to the conclusion that he was a fervent Christian bent on persecuting the Jews. By giving us instead a Jewish Paul bent on rescuing the Gentiles, Gager shows that 1st century Judaism wasn't an insular sect but a proselytizing faith. This interpretation effectively removes anti-Semitism from the Bible...In forcing a reconsideration of the second-most-pivotal figure in the history of Christianity, Gager has done a great service.
It took the 20th century to see that Paul meant it when he said that he was Apostle to the Gentiles
Anti-Judaism has long served a fundamental role in the construction of Christian identity. As John Gager argued in his earlier study, The Origins of Anti-Semitism (1983), this identity resulted not from the missions of Jesus or Paul in the first century, but from the ways in which later Christians interpreted these figures during the second, third, and fourth centuries. Extending the trajectory of his argument, Gager dissolves the Paul of later Gentile theologies and constructs in his stead a first-century Jewish visionary and apostle of apocalyptic hope. Anyone interested in Christian origins, in New Testament interpretation, or in new possibilities for interfaith dialogue will find his essay compelling and convincing.
My Paul has always been a pious, pompous, and somewhat inconsistent Christian, alternately displaying the anger of Jeremiah, the vision of Isaiah, and the ego of Douglas MacArthur. Gager's Paul is pre-Christian, a Jew who believed in Jesus as the Messiah who came to fulfill, not to destroy, the Law. Paul's message, Gager contends, was written for Gentiles of the first century, not for the Church of Augustine, sixteenth-century Protestant reformers, or post-Holocaust moderns. Gager's argument from text and context is always careful, learned, clear, and courageous
In his thoughtful, incisive, and lucidly written book, John Gager presents a radical challenge to the way that people have read Paul for 2000 years. Reinventing Paul is essential reading for anyone concerned with the history of religion and the relationship between Jews and Christians.
Notă biografică
John G. Gager is William H. Danforth Professor of Religion at Princeton University. The author of The Origins of Anti-Semitism and many other books and articles, he lives in Princeton, New Jersey.