Buch, Englisch, 277 Seiten, Hardback, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm
Early Christology in the Greco-Roman World
Buch, Englisch, 277 Seiten, Hardback, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm
ISBN: 978-1-4813-1675-0
Verlag: Baylor University Press
In Jesus among the gods Michael Bird gives renewed attention to divine ontology—what a god is—in relation to literary representations of Jesus. Most studies of the origins of early Christology focus on christological titles, various functions, divine identity, and types of worship. The application of ontological categories to Jesus is normally considered something that only began to happen in the second and third centuries as the early church engaged in platonizing interpretations of Jesus. Bird argues, to the contrary, that ontological language and categories were used to describe Jesus as an eternal, true, and unbegotten deity from the earliest decades of the nascent church.
Through comparison with representative authors such as Philo and Plutarch, and a comprehensive analysis of Jesus and various intermediary figures from Greco-Roman religion and ancient Judaism, Bird demonstrates how early accounts of Jesus both overlapped with and diverged from existing forms of religious expression. However Jesus resembled the various divine agents of Greco-Roman religion and Second Temple Judaism, the chorus of early Christian witnesses held Jesus to be simultaneously an agent of and an analogue with the God of Israel. Among the gods, Jesus stood in clear relief, a conviction that may have been refined over time but that belongs to the emerging heart of Christian confession.
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Weitere Infos & Material
- Introduction
- Part One: Jesus and Ancient Divinity
- 1. Problematizing Jesus' Divinity
- 2. The Search for Divine Ontology
- Part Two: Jesus and Intermediary Figures
- 3. Putting Jesus in His Place: Scholarship on Early Christology and Intermediary Figures
- 4. Jesus and the "In-Betweeners": Comparing Early Christologies and Intermediary Figures
- 5. Setting Jesus apart from Demiurges, Deities, Daemons, and Divi