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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Matthew Thiessen (Senior Lecturer in New Testament, Senior Lecturer in New Testament, College of Emmanuel and St. Chad and Lutheran Theological Seminary, Saskatoon Theological Union)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.476kg ISBN: 9780199793563ISBN 10: 0199793565 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 29 September 2011 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAbbreviations Introduction Part I: Genealogy and Circumcision in the Hebrew Bible Chapter 1: Ishmael, Isaac, and Covenantal Circumcision in Genesis 17 Chapter 2: Uncircumcised and Circumcised Gentiles in the Hebrew Bible Part II: Genealogy and Circumcision in Early Judaism and Christianity Chapter 3: Eighth-Day Circumcision in Jubilees Chapter 4: Jewishness as Genealogy in the Late Second Temple Period Chapter 5: Jews, Gentiles, and Circumcision in Early Christianity Conclusion BibliographyReviews<br> Contesting Conversion addresses an important topic in a fascinating way. It's convincing, makes a highly significant argument cogently, and is extremely well written. The remarkable thing about the book is that Thiessen demonstrates, over and over, that texts that have been understood to support the idea of conversion via circumcision say precisely the opposite. It is not that he has come with an agenda to the texts and discovered that for which he searched, but rather that scholarship till now has done that. Thiessen removes the scales from our eyes. ---Daniel Boyarin, Professor of Near Eastern Studies and Rhetoric, University of California-Berkeley <br><p><br> This is a fine piece of historical investigation which successfully challenges a scholarly consensus. Exploring the insistence on eight-day circumcision in the Hebrew Bible, some strands of Second Temple Judaism, and Luke-Acts, Thiessen unearths a robustly genealogical conception of Jewish identity that defies modern notions of religion. The result is a highly significant contribution to current debates about conversion, Jewishness and ethnicity in ancient Judaism and early Christianity. ---John M. G. Barclay, Lightfoot Professor of Divinity, Durham University <br><p><br> Contesting Conversion argues convincingly, on the basis of a wide range of biblical and post-biblical evidence, that the notion that being a Jew is determined by birth alone, and so cannot be affected by choice, was current in antiquity and alive and well among many Jews in the Second Temple period down to the first century C.E. With regard to circumcision, which many took to be part of a process of conversion, Thiessen argues that many other Jews limited its religious efficacy to male Jewish babies and therefore denied that it could turn a Gentile into a Jew. This book is a welcome and important balance to research into the ethnic vs. religious nature of ancient Jewishness, especially insofar as such research often builds its notions <br> It is a worthwhile read for students of the Hebrew and Christian Bibles, as well as rabbinic literature. --The Center for Jewish Law<p><br> Contesting Conversion addresses an important topic in a fascinating way. It's convincing, makes a highly significant argument cogently, and is extremely well written. The remarkable thing about the book is that Thiessen demonstrates, over and over, that texts that have been understood to support the idea of conversion via circumcision say precisely the opposite. It is not that he has come with an agenda to the texts and discovered that for which he searched, but rather that scholarship till now has done that. Thiessen removes the scales from our eyes. ---Daniel Boyarin, Professor of Near Eastern Studies and Rhetoric, University of California-Berkeley <br><p><br> This is a fine piece of historical investigation which successfully challenges a scholarly consensus. Exploring the insistence on eight-day circumcision in the Hebrew Bible, some strands of Second Temple Judaism, and Luke-Acts, Thiessen unearths a robustly genealogical conception of Jewish identity that defies modern notions of religion. The result is a highly significant contribution to current debates about conversion, Jewishness and ethnicity in ancient Judaism and early Christianity. ---John M. G. Barclay, Lightfoot Professor of Divinity, Durham University <br><p><br> Contesting Conversion argues convincingly, on the basis of a wide range of biblical and post-biblical evidence, that the notion that being a Jew is determined by birth alone, and so cannot be affected by choice, was current in antiquity and alive and well among many Jews in the Second Temple period down to the first century C.E. With regard to circumcision, which many took to be part of a process of conversion, Thiessen argues that many other Jews limited its religious efficacy to male Jewish babies and therefore denied that it could turn a Gentile into a Jew. This book is a welcome and important <br> Contesting Conversion addresses an important topic in a fascinating way. It's convincing, makes a highly significant argument cogently, and is extremely well written. The remarkable thing about the book is that Thiessen demonstrates, over and over, that texts that have been understood to support the idea of conversion via circumcision say precisely the opposite. It is not that he has come with an agenda to the texts and discovered that for which he searched, but rather that scholarship till now has done that. Thiessen removes the scales from our eyes. ---Daniel Boyarin, Professor of Near Eastern Studies and Rhetoric, University of California-Berkeley <br><p><br> This is a fine piece of historical investigation which successfully challenges a scholarly consensus. Exploring the insistence on eight-day circumcision in the Hebrew Bible, some strands of Second Temple Judaism, and Luke-Acts, Thiessen unearths a robustly genealogical conception of Jewish identity that defies modern notio Author InformationMatthew Thiessen is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at McMaster University and the author of Paul and the Gentile Problem (OUP 2016). 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