A characteristic of John’s gospel is the proclamation of Jesus as the incarnate Son of God. From its magnificent prologue whose opening words match the opening words of the Pentateuch to its concluding words urging faith in Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God, the Gospel of John has as its central focus the revelation that in Christ, the Maker of the Universe, YHWH, the great ‘I Am’ takes flesh and lives among us.
Judeophobia and the New Testament Texts and Contexts Edited by Sarah E. Rollens, Eric M. Vanden Eykel and Meredith J. C. Warren Judeophobia and the New Testament: Texts and Contexts is a timely and incisive contribution to the ongoing discourse surrounding the New Testament’s role in the history of anti-Judaism and Judeophobia. The volume brings together leading voices in biblical studies, Jewish studies, and ancient history to interrogate the intersections between New Testament texts and the socio-political dynamics of Jewish–non-Jewish relations in antiquity and their afterlives in Christian tradition. The book’s central thesis challenges the traditional Christian assumption that Judeophobia is primarily a post-biblical phenomenon. Instead, the editors and contributors argue that forms of anti-Jewish discourse are already embedded within or provoked by certain New Testament texts, though often in complex and contextually conditioned ways. The volume thus aligns with the broader t...
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