Performing Early Christian Literature

Performing Early Christian Literature
Author: Kelly Iverson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2021-10-07
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1316516229

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Performance creates a unique space for audience experience and influences how traditions, like the Gospels, are received and interpreted.

Performing Early Christian Literature

Performing Early Christian Literature
Author: Kelly R. Iverson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 230
Release: 2021
Genre: Bible
ISBN: 9781009014021

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Scholars of early Christian literature acknowledge that oral traditions lie behind the New Testament gospels. While the concept of orality is widely accepted, it has not resulted in a corresponding effort to understand the reception of the gospels within their oral milieu. In this book, Kelly Iverson reconsiders the experiential context in which early Christian literature was received and interpreted. He argues that reading and performance are distinguishable media events, and, significantly, that they produce distinctive interpretive experiences for readers and audiences alike. Iverson marshals an array of methodological perspectives demonstrating how performance generates a unique experiential context that shapes and informs the interpretive process. Iverson's study explores the dynamic oral environment in which ancient audiences experienced the gospel stories. He shows why an understanding of oral performance has important implications for the study of the NT, as well as for several issues that are largely unquestioned by biblical scholars.

Early Christian Literature and Intertextuality

Early Christian Literature and Intertextuality
Author: Craig A. Evans
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2009-04-09
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0567138216

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Scholarly interest in intertextuality remains as keen as ever. Armed with new questions, interpreters seek to understand better the function of older scripture in later scripture. The essays assembled in the present collection address these questions. These essays treat pre-Christian texts, as well as Christian texts, that make use of older sacred tradition. They analyze the respective uses of scripture in diverse Jewish and Christian traditions. Some of these studies are concerned with discreet bodies of writings, such as the Dead Sea Scrolls, while others are concerned with versions of scriptures, such as the Hebrew or Old Greek, and text critical issues. Other studies are concerned with how scripture is interpreted as part of apocalyptic and eschatology. Early Christian Literature and Intertextuality includes essays that explore the use of Old Testament scripture in the Gospels and Acts. Other studies examine the apostle Paul's interpretation of scripture in his letters, while other studies look at non-Pauline writings and their utilization of scripture. Some of the studies in this collection show how older scripture clarifies important points of teaching or resolves social conflict. Law, conversion, anthropology, paradise, and Messianism are among the themes treated in these studies, themes rooted in important ways in older sacred tradition. The collection concludes with studies on two important Christian interpreters, Syriac-speaking Aphrahat in the east and Latin-speaking Augustine in the west. [Part of the LNTS sub series Studies in Scripture in Early Judaism and Christianity (SSEJC), volume 14]

Performing Early Christian Literature

Performing Early Christian Literature
Author: Kelly Iverson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2021-10-07
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1009033859

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Scholars of early Christian literature acknowledge that oral traditions lie behind the New Testament gospels. While the concept of orality is widely accepted, it has not resulted in a corresponding effort to understand the reception of the gospels within their oral milieu. In this book, Kelly Iverson reconsiders the experiential context in which early Christian literature was received and interpreted. He argues that reading and performance are distinguishable media events, and, significantly, that they produce distinctive interpretive experiences for readers and audiences alike. Iverson marshals an array of methodological perspectives demonstrating how performance generates a unique experiential context that shapes and informs the interpretive process. Iverson's study explores the dynamic oral environment in which ancient audiences experienced the gospel stories. He shows why an understanding of oral performance has important implications for the study of the NT, as well as for several issues that are largely unquestioned by biblical scholars.

A History of Early Christian Literature

A History of Early Christian Literature
Author: Justo L. González
Publisher: Westminster John Knox Press
Total Pages: 415
Release: 2019-08-27
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1611649544

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Historical events have long been the standard lens through which scholars have sought to understand the theology of Christianity in late antiquity. The lives of significant theological figures, the rejection of individuals and movements as heretical, and the Trinitarian and christological controversiesthe defining theological events of the early churchhave long provided the framework with which to understand the development of early Christian belief. In this groundbreaking work, esteemed historian of Christianity Justo González chooses to focus on the literature of early Christianity. Beginning with the epistolary writings of the earliest Christian writers of the second century CE, he moves through apologies, martyrologies, antiheretical polemics, biblical commentaries, sermons, all the way up through Augustines invention of spiritual autobiography and beyond. Throughout he demonstrates how literary genre played a decisive role in the construction of theological meaning. Covering the earliest noncanonical Christian writings through the fifth century and later, this book will serve as an indispensable guide to students studying the theology of the early church.

Early Christian Literature and Intertextuality

Early Christian Literature and Intertextuality
Author: Craig A. Evans
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2009-08-25
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0567341003

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An in-depth analysis of intertextuality within early Christian literature, compiled with the aim of improving interpreters understading of the function of older scripture in later scripture.

The Cambridge History of Early Christian Literature

The Cambridge History of Early Christian Literature
Author: Frances Young
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 580
Release: 2004-04
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9780521460835

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