000 01791nam0a2200217 4500
001 26000
010 _a978-1-5409-6041-2
090 _a26000
100 _a20210608d2018 km|y0engy50 ba
101 1 _aeng
102 _aUS
200 1 _aHow New Is the New Testament?
_eFirst-Century Judaism and the Emergence of Christianity
_fHagner, Donald A.
210 _aGrand Rapids, Michigan
_cBaker Academic
_d♭2018
215 _aXII p. + 211 p.
327 _aContents Dedication Epigraph Preface Abbreviations 1. The Question of Continuity and Discontinuity 2. The Gospels of Mark and Matthew 3. The Gospel of Luke 4. The Acts of the Apostles 5. The Gospel of John and the Johannine Letters 6. The Pauline Corpus 7. Hebrews and the Catholic Letters 8. The Apocalypse 9. Newness in the New Testament: Continuity and Discontinuity Conclusion Bibliography Author Index Scripture and Ancient Sources Index Subject Index
330 _aWhat is so new about the New Testament? Senior scholar Donald Hagner tackles the issue of how distinct early Christianity was from the first-century Judaism from which it emerged. He surveys newness in the entire New Testament canon, examining the evidence for points of continuity and discontinuity between formative Judaism and early Christianity. Hagner's accessible analysis of the New Testament text shows that despite Christianity's thorough Jewishness, from the beginning dramatic newness was an essential aspect of this early literature.
676 _a225.6
700 1 _4070
_92960
_aHagner
_bD. A.
_f1936-
_gDonald Alfred
801 0 _aUA
_bUA-KiUET
_c20210608
942 _2ddc
_cBOOK
_h225.6
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