A Shadow of Glory: Reading the New Testament After the HolocaustPsychology Press, 2002 - 258 sayfa The writers of the New Testament were largely Jewish and laying the blame for the Holocaust at their feet would be absurd. However, the later cultural origins of anti-semitism means that reading the New Testament after the event calls for a new ethics of interpretation. These essays address this grave issue in detail, |
İçindekiler
Reading Jesus as a Nazi | 27 |
Shoah Consciousness and the Silence | 42 |
A Jewish Response to Saint Matthew | 57 |
The Apostle and the Seed of Abraham | 68 |
Sacrifice in the Epistle to the Hebrews | 89 |
Reading from the Day In Between | 105 |
JEWS AND GENTILES | 169 |
The Jew Paul and His Meaning for Israel | 201 |
Contributors | 249 |
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Abraham Acts anti-Jewish anti-Judaism antisemitism Apostle argued argument Aryan Auschwitz authority Barabbas Baur believe biblical text canon century Chris Christ Christian biblical scholars church circumcision claim Commentary contemporary context Corinthians covenant cross Crossan crowd cultural daism Deutsche Christen disciples divine early Christian Epistle essay faith Feminist Fortress Galatians Gentiles German God's Gospel Grundmann Hebrew Bible hermeneutic historical criticism Holocaust human Ibid innocent Israel Israelite Jerusalem Jesus Jewish Bible Jewish Christians Jews Jews and Christians John Dominic Crossan Judaism Kaschnitz killing Luke Luke-Acts Marcion Matthean Matthew meaning Melchizedek ment Messiah midrash murder Nazi Old Testament passion narratives Pastoral Epistles Paul Paul's Pauline perspective Pharisees Pilate post-Holocaust prophets question rabbinic readers reading rejected religion religious responsibility resurrection Romans salvation scriptures of Israel second day Shoah story supersessionism Tanakh teaching theologians theological tians tion Torah tradition understanding University Press Walter Brueggemann Wiesel words writings York