Violence in the New Testament
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About This Book
"While much work has been done on the role of Jews in the crucifixion of Jesus in post-Holocaust biblical scholarship, the question of violence in subsequent community formation remains largely unexamined. New Testament passages suggesting that early Christ-believers were violently persecuted - the "stone throwing" passages from John, the "persecuted from town to town" passages in Matthew, the stoning of Stephen in Acts, Paul's hardship catalogue in II Corinthians, etcetera - are frequently read positivistically as windows onto first-century persecution; at the other extreme, they are sometimes dismissed as completely ahistorical. In either case, scholars up until now have provided little in the way of methodological reflection on how they have reached such conclusions." "This volume takes up crucial methodological questions about how to read passages suggesting violence among Jews in texts that eventually became part of the New Testament canon. It situates this intra-religious violence within the violence of the Roman imperial order. It provides new readings of these texts that move beyond the "Jew as violator"/"Christian as violated" binary."--BOOK JACKET.
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