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OverviewA comprehensive treatment of the early Christian approaches to the Temple and its role in shaping Jewish and Christian identity The first scholarly work to trace the Temple throughout the entire New Testament, this study examines Jewish and Christian attitudes toward the Temple in the first century and provides both Jews and Christians with a better understanding of their respective faiths and how they grow out of this ancient institution. The centrality of the Temple in New Testament writing reveals the authors’ negotiations with the institutional and symbolic center of Judaism as they worked to form their own religion. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Eyal Regev , John J. CollinsPublisher: Yale University Press Imprint: Yale University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.879kg ISBN: 9780300197884ISBN 10: 0300197888 Pages: 496 Publication Date: 11 June 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsThis is a valuable scholarly work that shines new light on the relation of early Christianity to its Jewish matrix. --Donald Senior, Bible Today In this stimulating book, Eyal Regev rightly places the Jewish temple at the center of the new messianic movement that will eventually become known as Christianity. The Temple in Early Christianity makes a fresh and original contribution to a very important topic. --Craig A. Evans, Houston Baptist University Far too many scholars still read the New Testament in a way that is shaped by the arguments of generations of Christian writers engaged in anti-Jewish polemic. In these disputations the temple has played a major role. In this must-read book, Eyal Regev shows how the temple played a major positive role in many of the early Christian texts that were eventually canonized as the New Testament. --Adela Yarbro Collins, Yale Divinity School This is a valuable scholarly work that shines new light on the relation of early Christianity to its Jewish matrix. --Donald Senior, Bible Today In this stimulating book, Eyal Regev rightly places the Jewish temple at the center of the new messianic movement that will eventually become known as Christianity. The Temple in Early Christianity makes a fresh and original contribution to a very important topic. --Craig A. Evans, Houston Baptist University Far too many scholars still read the New Testament in a way that is shaped by the arguments of generations of Christian writers engaged in anti-Jewish polemic. In these disputations the temple has played a major role. In this must-read book, Eyal Regev shows how the temple played a major positive role in many of the early Christian texts that were eventually canonized as the New Testament. --Adela Yarbro Collins, Yale Divinity School This is a valuable scholarly work that shines new light on the relation of early Christianity to its Jewish matrix. --Donald Senior, Bible Today This volume is a major scholarly accomplishment, strongly focused and ambitious in scope. . . . Regev amply succeeds in realizing his major goal: to make us think differently about the role and the meanings of the temple for the earliest generations of Christians. --Joris Geldhof, Horizons Regev's work successfully offers the reader insightful ways to understand the Temple and sacrificial cult in the NT. Overall, his argument is compelling and clearly articulated . . . Highly Recommended. --Craig D. Saunders, Religious Studies Review In this stimulating book, Eyal Regev rightly places the Jewish temple at the center of the new messianic movement that will eventually become known as Christianity. The Temple in Early Christianity makes a fresh and original contribution to a very important topic. --Craig A. Evans, Houston Baptist University Far too many scholars still read the New Testament in a way that is shaped by the arguments of generations of Christian writers engaged in anti-Jewish polemic. In these disputations the temple has played a major role. In this must-read book, Eyal Regev shows how the temple played a major positive role in many of the early Christian texts that were eventually canonized as the New Testament. --Adela Yarbro Collins, Yale Divinity School """This is a valuable scholarly work that shines new light on the relation of early Christianity to its Jewish matrix.""--Donald Senior, Bible Today ""This volume is a major scholarly accomplishment, strongly focused and ambitious in scope. . . . Regev amply succeeds in realizing his major goal: to make us think differently about the role and the meanings of the temple for the earliest generations of Christians.""--Joris Geldhof, Horizons ""Regev's work successfully offers the reader insightful ways to understand the Temple and sacrificial cult in the NT. Overall, his argument is compelling and clearly articulated . . . Highly Recommended.""--Craig D. Saunders, Religious Studies Review ""In this stimulating book, Eyal Regev rightly places the Jewish temple at the center of the new messianic movement that will eventually become known as Christianity. The Temple in Early Christianity makes a fresh and original contribution to a very important topic.""--Craig A. Evans, Houston Baptist University ""Far too many scholars still read the New Testament in a way that is shaped by the arguments of generations of Christian writers engaged in anti-Jewish polemic. In these disputations the temple has played a major role. In this must-read book, Eyal Regev shows how the temple played a major positive role in many of the early Christian texts that were eventually canonized as the New Testament.""--Adela Yarbro Collins, Yale Divinity School" In this stimulating book, Eyal Regev rightly places the Jewish temple at the center of the new messianic movement that will eventually become known as Christianity. The Temple in Early Christianity makes a fresh and original contribution to a very important topic. --Craig A. Evans, Houston Baptist University Author InformationEyal Regev is professor of Jewish studies in the department of land of Israel studies and archaeology at Bar-Ilan University. His books include The Sadducees and their Halakhah, Sectarianism in Qumran, and The Hasmoneans: Ideology, Archaeology, Identity. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |