Social Aspects of Early Christianity, Second Edition
Imprint: Wipf and Stock
144 Pages, 5.50 x 8.50 x 7.00 in
- Paperback
- 9781592444113
- Published: October 2003
$23.00 / £21.00 / AU$30.00
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Comments on the First Edition...
Those concerned with Christian beginnings will find Malherbe stimulating and incisive on the New Testament.
Robert M. Gratn, Journal of Religion
The author is a scholar of great learning. I found the footnotes to be extremely useful, and the challenge of the book that a new consesus has emerged is a genuine contribution to continuing debate. Robin Scroggs, Journal of the American Academy of Religion
An interesting and informed introduction to an important new development in the study of earliest Christianity. - Victor P. Furnish, Perkins Journal
The book constitutes a major challenge to the depictions of early Christianity - especially of the Pauline Wing in earlier scholarly work. - Howard Clark Kee, Reflection
Abraham J. Malherbe is Buckingham Professor Emeritus of New Testament Criticism and Interpretation at Yale University. Malherbe has written extensively on the literary and social dimensions of ancient literature and Greco-Roman philosophy. Some of his many books include Moral Exhortation: A Greco-Roman Sourcebook, Paul & the Popular Philosophers, Ancient Epistolary Theorists, and The Letters to the Thessalonians.
Comments on the First Edition...
"Those concerned with Christian beginnings will find Malherbe stimulating and incisive on the New Testament."
Robert M. Gratn, Journal of Religion
"The author is a scholar of great learning. I found the footnotes to be extremely useful, and the challenge of the book that a new consesus has emerged is a genuine contribution to continuing debate." Robin Scroggs, Journal of the American Academy of Religion
"An interesting and informed introduction to an important new development in the study of earliest Christianity." - Victor P. Furnish, Perkins Journal
"The book constitutes a major challenge to the depictions of early Christianity - especially of the Pauline Wing in earlier scholarly work." - Howard Clark Kee, Reflection