This project examines the depiction of Jewish and Christian identity in Acts of the Apostles by placing the writer’s ethnic claims within a broader material and epigraphic context. Scholarship on Jewish identity in Acts has often emphasized Jewish and Christian religious difference, an emphasis that has tended to mask the intersections of civic, ethnic, and religious identifications in antiquity. Such identity categories did not exist as distinct, stable entities. Rather, as discussions of identity in antiquity demonstrate, they were contested, negotiable, and ambiguous. Bringing Acts into conversation with recent scholarly insights regarding identity as represented in Roman era material and epigraphic remains shows that Acts presents Jews ...
When first-century gentile Christians withdrew from the traditional and civic Graeco-Roman cults and...
Interpretations of Philippians have commonly suggested that the letter seeks to demonstrate the wort...
The institutional, social, and theological rise of an imperial-episcopal orthodoxy in the 4th-centur...
Abstract In antiquity group identity was based upon cultural ethnicity. Groups used their ethni...
A Postcolonial Reading of the Acts of the Apostles explores Acts, with its twofold motif of self-exa...
Luke-Acts is consistently optimistic regarding the triumph of God\u27s purposes through Israel. Yet ...
Thesis (Master of Arts (Theological Studies))--St. Bernard's School of Theology and Ministry, 2015.T...
This article attempts to analyze the important role of God-fearers in informing the early Christian ...
Acts attempts the recategorization of Judean and non-Judean Christ followers … into a common ingroup...
Exploring Jewish-Christian interaction in Late Antiquity in the form of three case studies, Leonard ...
In NTS 62.3 (July 2016) David Horrell argued that certain passages in 1 Corinthians 7 and 1 Peter 3 ...
In modern times, various Jewish groups have argued whether Jewishness is a function of ethnicity, of...
Luke-Acts is consistently optimistic regarding the triumph of God\u27s purposes through Israel. Yet ...
In NTS 62.3 (July 2016) David Horrell argued that certain passages in 1 Corinthians 7 and 1 Peter 3 ...
Ethnicity reasoning offers one way of looking at social identity in the letter to the Hebrews. The c...
When first-century gentile Christians withdrew from the traditional and civic Graeco-Roman cults and...
Interpretations of Philippians have commonly suggested that the letter seeks to demonstrate the wort...
The institutional, social, and theological rise of an imperial-episcopal orthodoxy in the 4th-centur...
Abstract In antiquity group identity was based upon cultural ethnicity. Groups used their ethni...
A Postcolonial Reading of the Acts of the Apostles explores Acts, with its twofold motif of self-exa...
Luke-Acts is consistently optimistic regarding the triumph of God\u27s purposes through Israel. Yet ...
Thesis (Master of Arts (Theological Studies))--St. Bernard's School of Theology and Ministry, 2015.T...
This article attempts to analyze the important role of God-fearers in informing the early Christian ...
Acts attempts the recategorization of Judean and non-Judean Christ followers … into a common ingroup...
Exploring Jewish-Christian interaction in Late Antiquity in the form of three case studies, Leonard ...
In NTS 62.3 (July 2016) David Horrell argued that certain passages in 1 Corinthians 7 and 1 Peter 3 ...
In modern times, various Jewish groups have argued whether Jewishness is a function of ethnicity, of...
Luke-Acts is consistently optimistic regarding the triumph of God\u27s purposes through Israel. Yet ...
In NTS 62.3 (July 2016) David Horrell argued that certain passages in 1 Corinthians 7 and 1 Peter 3 ...
Ethnicity reasoning offers one way of looking at social identity in the letter to the Hebrews. The c...
When first-century gentile Christians withdrew from the traditional and civic Graeco-Roman cults and...
Interpretations of Philippians have commonly suggested that the letter seeks to demonstrate the wort...
The institutional, social, and theological rise of an imperial-episcopal orthodoxy in the 4th-centur...