How do you plan on using your gratis copy?
Review requests are for media inquiries.
Exam requests are for professors, teachers, and librarians who want to review a book for course adoption.
Luke Johnson here issues a provocative call for a radically new
direction in New Testament studies that can change the way we have
viewed the entire phenomenon of early Christianity.
Johnson is
convinced that the dominant ways of studying early Christianity tend
to miss its specifically religious character, because of a
disjunction between formal religion and "popular" religion. He
proposes in this book, by means of three case studiesbaptism,
glossolalia, and mealsto show how a more wholistic,
phenomenological approach can be made. This makes possible the
inclusion of the world of healings and religious power, of ecstay
and spiritin short, the religious experience of real persons in
the study of early Christianity.
Johnson concludes that there is
still much to be learned about early Christianity as a religion, if
we can find a way to get at the category of real experience. He
maintains that early Christian texts reflect lives that are caught up
by and defined by a power not in their control but controlled instead
by the crucified and raised Messiah
Jesus.
PublisherFortress Press
FormatPaperback
ISBN9780800631291
Dimensions6 x 9
Pages208
Publication DateApril 29, 1998
Table of Contents
Preface 1. What's Missing from Christian Origins 2. Getting at Christian Experience 3. Ritual Imprinting and the Politics of Perfection 4. Glossolalia and the Embarrassments of Experiments 5. Meals Are Where the Magic Is Epilogue