Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier. Sign in or sign up for free!

Become a Readings Member. Sign in or sign up for free!

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre to view your orders, change your details, or view your lists, or sign out.

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre or sign out.

John and the Others: Jewish Relations, Christian Origins, and the Sectarian Hermeneutic
Hardback

John and the Others: Jewish Relations, Christian Origins, and the Sectarian Hermeneutic

$178.99
Sign in or become a Readings Member to add this title to your wishlist.

The Johannine literature has inspired the Church’s christological creeds, prompted its Trinitarian formulations, and resourced its ecumenical and social movements. However, while confessional readers find in these texts a divine love for the world, biblical scholars often detect a dangerous program of harsh polemics arrayed against the other. In this frame, the Johannine writings are products of an anti-society with its own anti-language articulating a worldview that is anti-ecclesiastical, anti-hierarchical, and, more seriously, anti-Jewish and even anti-Semitic. In New Testament studies, the prefix anti- has become almost Johannine.

In John and the Others, Andrew Byers challenges the sectarian hermeneutic that has shaped much of the interpretation of the Gospel and Letters of John. Rather than anti-Jewish, we should understand John as opposed to the exclusionary positioning of ethnicity as a soteriological category. Neither is this stream of early Christianity antagonistic towards the wider Christian movement. The Fourth Evangelist openly situates his work in a crowded field of alternative narratives about Jesus without seeking to supplant prior works. Though John is often regarded as a low-church theologian, Byers shows that the episcopal ecclesiology of Ignatius of Antioch is compatible with Johannine theology. John does not locate revelation solely within the personal authority of each believer under the power of the Spirit, and so does not undercut hierarchical leadership.

Byers demonstrates that the Other Disciple is actually a salutary resource for a contemporary world steeped in the negative discourse of othering. Though John’s social vision entails othering, the negative other in John is ultimately cosmic evil, and his theological convictions are grounded in the most sweeping act of de-othering in history, when the divine Other became flesh and dwelled among us. This early Christian tradition certainly erected boundaries, but all Johannine walls have a Gate -Jesus, the Lamb of God slain for the sin of the world that God loves.

Read More
In Shop
Out of stock
Shipping & Delivery

$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout

MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Baylor University Press
Country
United States
Date
1 September 2021
Pages
248
ISBN
9781481315906

The Johannine literature has inspired the Church’s christological creeds, prompted its Trinitarian formulations, and resourced its ecumenical and social movements. However, while confessional readers find in these texts a divine love for the world, biblical scholars often detect a dangerous program of harsh polemics arrayed against the other. In this frame, the Johannine writings are products of an anti-society with its own anti-language articulating a worldview that is anti-ecclesiastical, anti-hierarchical, and, more seriously, anti-Jewish and even anti-Semitic. In New Testament studies, the prefix anti- has become almost Johannine.

In John and the Others, Andrew Byers challenges the sectarian hermeneutic that has shaped much of the interpretation of the Gospel and Letters of John. Rather than anti-Jewish, we should understand John as opposed to the exclusionary positioning of ethnicity as a soteriological category. Neither is this stream of early Christianity antagonistic towards the wider Christian movement. The Fourth Evangelist openly situates his work in a crowded field of alternative narratives about Jesus without seeking to supplant prior works. Though John is often regarded as a low-church theologian, Byers shows that the episcopal ecclesiology of Ignatius of Antioch is compatible with Johannine theology. John does not locate revelation solely within the personal authority of each believer under the power of the Spirit, and so does not undercut hierarchical leadership.

Byers demonstrates that the Other Disciple is actually a salutary resource for a contemporary world steeped in the negative discourse of othering. Though John’s social vision entails othering, the negative other in John is ultimately cosmic evil, and his theological convictions are grounded in the most sweeping act of de-othering in history, when the divine Other became flesh and dwelled among us. This early Christian tradition certainly erected boundaries, but all Johannine walls have a Gate -Jesus, the Lamb of God slain for the sin of the world that God loves.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Baylor University Press
Country
United States
Date
1 September 2021
Pages
248
ISBN
9781481315906