An authoritative handbook on Jesus, his world, the outcomes of his life, and the quests to locate him in history.The Jesus Handbook is an indispensable reference work featuring essays from an int
An authoritative handbook on Jesus, his world, the outcomes of his life, and the quests to locate him in history.
The Jesus Handbook is an indispensable reference work featuring essays from an international team of renowned scholars on the significance and meaning of the life of Jesus of Nazareth. Rooted in historical-critical methodology, it emphasizes a diversity of perspectives and provides a spectrum of possible interpretations rather than a single unified portrait of Jesus. The Handbook’s dozens of authors—Jewish, Roman Catholic, and Protestant—all remain committed to the principle of interpreting the life of Jesus in context, while also giving due diligence to the implications of archaeological evidence and recent discourses in the hermeneutics of history.
After an introduction that lays out the considerations of the task at hand, the authors survey the history of Jesus research and take a close look at the historical material itself—textual and otherwise. From this foundation, the Handbook then details the life of Jesus before at last exploring the reception and effects of Jesus’s life after his death, especially in the first centuries CE. With this wealth of information available in a single volume, scholars and students of the New Testament and early Christianity—and anyone interested in the search for the historical Jesus—will find The Jesus Handbook to be a resource that they return to time and again for both its breadth and depth.
Contributors:
Sven-Olav Back, Knut Backhaus, Reinhard von Bendemann, Albrecht Beutel, Darrell L. Bock, Martina Böhm, Cilliers Breytenbach, James G. Crossley, Lutz Doering, Martin Ebner, Craig A. Evans, Jörg Frey, Yair Furstenberg, Simon Gathercole, Christine Gerber, Katharina Heyden, Friedrich W. Horn, Stephen Hultgren, Christine Jacobi, Jeremiah J. Johnston, Thomas Kazen, Chris Keith, John S. Kloppenborg, Bernd Kollmann, Michael Labahn, Hermut Löhr, Steve Mason, Tobias Nicklas, Markus Öhler, Martin Ohst, Karl-Heinrich Ostmeyer, James Carleton Paget, Rachel Schär, Eckart David Schmidt, Jens Schröter, Daniel R. Schwartz, Markus Tiwald, David du Toit, Joseph Verheyden, Samuel Vollenweider, Ulrich Volp, Annette Weissenrieder, Michael Wolter, Jürgen K. Zangenberg, Christiane Zimmermann, and Ruben Zimmermann.
Religious Studies Review
“These essays will be tough sledding for non-specialists, but scholars will appreciate the up-to-date, methodologically informed overviews, above all, those from German scholars whose work has only rarely appeared in translation.”
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Jens Schröter is professor of New Testament and ancient Christian apocrypha at Humboldt University of Berlin.
Christine Jacobi is visiting professor of New Testament and ancient Christian apocrypha at Humboldt University of Berlin.
View Biographical note
Table of Contents
Foreword by Dale C. Allison Jr.
Translator’s Preface
Introduction
History of Historical-Critical Research on Jesus
The Historical Material
The Life and Work of Jesus
Early Traces of the Wirkungen (Effects) and Reception of Jesus
Bibliography
Indexes
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