This article is devoted to Leon Modena\u2019s anti-Christian polemical work Magen ve-herev (1643 ca.) as a useful source for the reconstruction of notions about the historical Jesus in the early modern period. In this work, Modena depicts Jesus in a sympathetic way, placing his religious activity against the backdrop of second Temple Judaism. Modena\u2019s Jesus is fully Jewish, and Magen ve-herev offers different perspectives on the religious and historical context of Jesus\u2019 life, and on the development of Christianity. The text is interpreted not exclusively against the backdrop of Jewish anti-Christian polemics but as the result of an increasing interest in the history of Christianity and ecclesiastical history, mainly as a response...
This inquiry explores the juxtaposition of medieval rabbinic and Renaissance humanistic thought in t...
This essay attempts a reconceptualized relationship between Jesus the Jewish man and Christ the Chri...
<strong>The Jesus of history: Hermeneutic premises in the research of JP Meier. </strong>...
This article is devoted to Leon Modena’s anti-Christian polemical work Magen ve-herev (1643 ca.) as ...
This article aims to analyze the anti-Christian Jewish work of Leon Modena, Magen ve-herev, compile...
none1siThe article offers a preliminary analysis of the anti-Christian polemical text composed by Le...
The exceptional and yet very human life of Jesus has been represented in a vast breadth of forms, fr...
This article maps out recent developments in the exegetical investigation of Jesus. It starts with a...
This article considers the reasons why modern scholars have felt the need to go behind the four Gosp...
<strong>The Jesus of history: A citical relection on J P Meier's Jesus-proile.</strong> ...
This article investigates the origins and development of the earliest Jesus movements within the con...
The collection of articles presented here contains various methodological lines of inquiry. At the s...
Whereas the study of Catholic modernism has been thoroughly pursued, the relationship between Jews a...
This article considers the reasons why modern scholars have felt the need to go behind the four Gosp...
The persecutions of Jesus and the members of the ancient Church are well attested by Christian (New ...
This inquiry explores the juxtaposition of medieval rabbinic and Renaissance humanistic thought in t...
This essay attempts a reconceptualized relationship between Jesus the Jewish man and Christ the Chri...
<strong>The Jesus of history: Hermeneutic premises in the research of JP Meier. </strong>...
This article is devoted to Leon Modena’s anti-Christian polemical work Magen ve-herev (1643 ca.) as ...
This article aims to analyze the anti-Christian Jewish work of Leon Modena, Magen ve-herev, compile...
none1siThe article offers a preliminary analysis of the anti-Christian polemical text composed by Le...
The exceptional and yet very human life of Jesus has been represented in a vast breadth of forms, fr...
This article maps out recent developments in the exegetical investigation of Jesus. It starts with a...
This article considers the reasons why modern scholars have felt the need to go behind the four Gosp...
<strong>The Jesus of history: A citical relection on J P Meier's Jesus-proile.</strong> ...
This article investigates the origins and development of the earliest Jesus movements within the con...
The collection of articles presented here contains various methodological lines of inquiry. At the s...
Whereas the study of Catholic modernism has been thoroughly pursued, the relationship between Jews a...
This article considers the reasons why modern scholars have felt the need to go behind the four Gosp...
The persecutions of Jesus and the members of the ancient Church are well attested by Christian (New ...
This inquiry explores the juxtaposition of medieval rabbinic and Renaissance humanistic thought in t...
This essay attempts a reconceptualized relationship between Jesus the Jewish man and Christ the Chri...
<strong>The Jesus of history: Hermeneutic premises in the research of JP Meier. </strong>...