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Paperback After the New Testament: A Reader in Early Christianity Book

ISBN: 0195114450

ISBN13: 9780195114454

After the New Testament: A Reader in Early Christianity

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

The remarkable diversity of Christianity during the formative years before the Council of Nicea has become a plain, even natural, "fact" for most ancient historians. Until now, however, there has been no sourcebook of primary texts that reveals the many varieties of Christian beliefs, practices, ethics, experiences, confrontations, and self-understandings. To help readers recognize and experience the rich diversity of the early Christian movement,...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

After the New Testament:A Reader in Early Christianity

After skimming the book, it is my opinion that this book would be best used in a study or classroom setting. It is my intention to present this book to my Sunday School teacher and consider it for study. The class is more progressive and most will accept it as history(not like most classes I have attended). Bart Ehrman's books are very easy reading. I have learned a great deal from all the books I have ordered.

Historic Christianity

Mr Ehrman leaves no stone unturned in tapping the vast and ever expanding reservoir of archaeological and hermeneutic studies of the early Christian movement. At the top of his class and certainly a blessing to read compared to some of the much dryer dissertations one comes across in the religious studies genre.

I bought this book because I like Harry Potter

Book arrived in good condition and in a timely manner.

A Profitable Read

I used this book in a course on Early Judaism and Early Christianity, which I took as an undergraduate. Although one may read a secondary reader, there is nothing like reading a well-chosen sampling of primary texts - and the selections here are just that: well-chosen. Although the Church traces its lineage and heritage through a particular history - the New Testament, followed by the Apostolic Fathers and they themselves followed by the Church Fathers - in reading this volume one immediately notices a spectrum of thought, filled with every subtle shade of variation that one could imagine. It is in reading the differences and polemical writings contained here that makes the battles between traditions so fascinating: after the New Testament, one can rightly speak of earliest Christianities. Somehow or another, though, they all find their raison d'etre in Jesus, the itinerant Jewis Hasid from Nazareth. Perhaps one may be generous enough to say that every writing in this book seeks to answer Christ's question to the Apostles: "Who do you say that I am?" From Gnostic writings and proto-orthodox Church Fathers to apocryphal Gospels and "lost" Epistles, one is thrust into a mass of movements, each of which claims to have the answer to this question. (And, as a side note, it turns out that the views of the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches are, in fact, among the most ancient of these various other traditions.) Ehrman's introductions are short and to the point; they are helpful and note where writings develop earlier, more historical traditions, if writings were later declared orthodox or heretical and what the polemical context was of a particular piece. He also notes where texts were once used and where they were popular, and if and when they fell out of favor. Lastly, and most interestingly to this reader, is the short section that notes the development of the canon of the New Testament and how many books that are now taken for granted were hotly debated in those early centuries. One could easily spend hundreds of dollars collecting the various works that were important to and written by early Christians/s/s/s/s/...; this book is a wonderful, well-written selection of those works. As a supplement to studies in early Christianity, Judaism and/or later Antiquity, it will prove to be quite helpful and informative. For the interested lay person, this book will also prove to be both informative and an excellent introduction to the subject. In short, it is a profitable read.
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