The Reception of Jesus in the First Three Centuries
Jens Schröter editor Dr Helen K Bond editor Dr Christine Jacobi editor Professor Chris Keith editor
Format:Set / collection
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:19th Sep '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This major resource lets readers discover the multifaceted nature of Christianity in the first three centuries, showing how the Jesus tradition was transmitted and received.
In The Reception of Jesus in the First Three Centuries, Chris L. Keith, Helen K. Bond, Christine Jacobi and Jens Schröter, together with an international cast of more than 70 contributors, provide a methodologically sophisticated resource, showing the reception history of Jesus and the Jesus tradition in early Christianity. The three volumes focus upon the diversity of receptions of the Jesus tradition in this time period, with memory theory providing the framework for approaching the complex interactions between the past of the tradition and the present of its receptions. Rather than addressing texts specifically as canonical or non-canonical, the volumes show the more complex reality of the reception of the Jesus tradition in early Christianity.
Core literary texts such as Gospels and other early Christian writings are discussed in detail, as well as non-literary contexts outside the gospel genre; including the Apostolic Fathers, patristic writers, traditions such as the Abgar Legend, and modifications to the gospel genre such as the Diatesseron. Evidence from material culture, such as pictographic representations of Jesus in iconography and graffiti (e.g. the staurogram and Alexamenos Graffito), as well as representations of Jesus tradition in sarcophagi and in liturgy are also included, in order to fully reflect the transmission and reception of the Jesus tradition.
Volume 1 provides an extensive introduction and, in 18 chapters, covers literary representations of Jesus in the first century, featuring gospel literature and other early Christian writings.
Volume 2 examines all the literary texts from the second and third centuries, across 40 chapters, examining both gospel writing and other texts.
Volume 3 examines visual, liturgical and non-Christian receptions of Jesus in the second and third centuries, across 24 chapters.
A gem for New Testament and early church scholarship, this set will surely be a standard reference work and will set the bar for years to come. * CHOICE *
It is a monumental undertaking, weighing in at nearly 1500 pages ... Overall, this is one of the best research publications I have acquired in years. * Religious Studies Review *
Beyond the acuity of contributors, the volumes are elegantly organized and cover a diverse collection of textual and non-textual evidence. * Enoch Seminar *
The expansive range of contributors is a strength of this project … Scholars of early Christianity, regardless of specialization, will want to read this collection. * Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses *
The publication of this three-volume set is an indisputable feat of scholarship. The aim of the editors is simple yet stunning: to describe and discuss the myriad of sources from the first three centuries–canonical and non-canonical, literary and visual, Christian and non-Christian—that preserve and present the influence of the person and/or work of Jesus ... this landmark work will serve students of the New Testament and early Christianity well for years to come. * Themelios *
ISBN: 9780567000194
Dimensions: 302mm x 200mm x 100mm
Weight: 3640g