Playing a Jewish Game: Gentile Christian Judaizing in the First and Second Centuries CE

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Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, 13/04/2004 - 221 páginas

Is it possible that early Christian anti-Judaism was directed toward people other than Jews?

Michele Murray proposes that significant strands of early Christian anti-Judaism were directed against Gentile Christians. More specifically, it was directed toward Gentile Christian judaizers. These were Christians who combined a commitment to Christianity with adherence in varying degrees to Jewish practices, without viewing such behaviour as contradictory. Several Christian leaders thought that these community members dangerously blurred the boundaries between Christianity and Judaism. As such, Gentile Christian judaizers became the target of much anti-Jewish rhetoric in various early Christian writings.

Evidence of Gentile Christian judaizers can be found in canonical sources, such as Pauls Letter to the Galatians and the Book of Revelation, as well as non-canonical sources, such as the Epistle of Barnabas, the Didache, and Justin Martyr’s Dialogue with Trypho. In order to compare the phenomenon of judaizing and the reaction to it of ecclesiastical authorities, Murray organizes the evidence by probable geographical location, using Asia Minor and Syria as the two main loci.

The phenomenon of Gentile Christian judaizing is examined within the broader context of Jewish-Christian relations in the early centuries, and is the first attempt to draw all possible references to Gentile Christian judaizers together into one study to consider them as a whole. This discussion invites readers to reflect on the existence of Gentile Christian judaizers as another point on the continuum of Jewish-Christian relations in the Greco-Roman world — an area, Murray concludes, that needs to be more carefully defined.

 

Índice

Judaizing and the Early Development of Christianity
1
CHAPTER 2 Gentile Attraction to Judaism in the Roman Empire
11
Pauls Letter to the Galatians
29
Barnabas the Didache and PseudoClementine Literature
43
Revelation Ignatius and Justin Martyr
73
More Evidence of Christian Judaizing in Asia Minor?
101
Christian Judaizing and the Forging of a Distinct Christian Identity
117
Scholarly Perceptions of JewishChristian Relations in Antiquity
127
Notes
153
Bibliography
185
Ancient Sources Index
211
Subject Index
217
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Página 12 - ... compassion, though they regard the rest of mankind with all the hatred of enemies. They sit apart at meals, they sleep apart, and though, as a nation, they are singularly prone to lust, they abstain from intercourse with foreign women; among themselves nothing is unlawful. Circumcision was adopted by them as a mark of difference from other men. Those who come over to their religion adopt the practice, and have this lesson first instilled into them, to despise all gods, to disown their country,...
Página 15 - Some, whose lot it was to have Sabbath-fearing fathers, worship nothing but clouds and the numen of the heavens, and think it as great a crime to eat pork, from which their parents abstained, as human flesh. They get themselves circumcised, and look down on Roman law, preferring instead to learn and honour and fear the Jewish commandments...

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