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Showing posts from November, 2024
 James Crossley and Chris Keith’s work called  The Next Quest for the Historical Jesus represents an ambitious, thought-provoking addition to the evolving field of historical Jesus studies. The editors gather a diverse array of scholars who not only re-evaluate traditional methodologies but also probe the ideological underpinnings of the so-called “quests” for the historical Jesus. This text, with contributions from scholars such as Helen Bond, Rafael Rodríguez, and Anthony Le Donne, moves beyond the well-trodden territory of historicity debates to address broader issues within the field’s methodological and epistemological frameworks. The volume opens by framing itself as a response to the question of whether the “quest” metaphor remains relevant or necessary for historical Jesus studies. This concern is emblematic of the broader intention of the collection: to unsettle comfortable assumptions and push the field toward innovative approaches that reflect contemporary shifts in histo