
While The Gospels, Paul's Letters, And The Book Of Revelation Have Been Well Served By Volumes Orienting Readers To The Scholarly Literature And To Their Reception Histories, Hebrews And The Catholic Epistles Have Not Received Nearly The Same Attention. This Relative Neglect Is In Part A Legacy Of The Reformation In The Sixteenth Century. Insofar As Doctrinal Purity In Protestant Circles Was Defined According To Rubrics That Were, Implicitly Or Explicitly, Pauline In Orientation, Hebrews And The Catholic Epistles Were At An Obvious Disadvantage. However, These Writings Have Had A Great Influence On Christianity Throughout The Centuries. As It Turns Out, The Study Of Hebrews And The Catholic Epistles Was Never Truly Confined To Their Place In Fraught Ecclesiastical Disputes. Recent Decades Have Witnessed A Resurgence Of Interest In These Writings. The Present Volume Seeks To Assess The Relevance Of These Works To Various Questions That Are Often Posed To Other Parts Of The New Testament Canon, To Report On The Current State Of Scholarship Devoted To The Interpretive Issues They Raise, And To Survey Their Rich And Often-overlooked Afterlives. Divided Into Four Parts-general Issues, Topics Related To Hebrews, Topics Related To The Catholic Epistles, And Reception And Engagement-the Oxford Handbook Of Hebrews And The Catholic Epistles Studies These Books Individually As Witnesses To The Cultural And Theological Diversity Of The Early Church But Also For What They Reveal About The Process That Would Eventually Produce The New Testament Canon-- Provided By Publisher.
This volume investigates the historical, theological, and reception-based significance of the Epistle to the Hebrews and the Catholic Epistles within the New Testament canon. Edited by Patrick T. R. Gray, the collection gathers contributions from leading scholars to address the relative scholarly neglect of these texts compared to Pauline literature. The work argues that these writings are essential for understanding the cultural diversity of the early church and the complex processes of canon formation.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of theology frequently cite this handbook as a primary reference for navigating the complex interpretive history of the Catholic Epistles. Experts highlight the text's academic rigor and its success in bridging the gap between historical criticism and contemporary theological inquiry.
Page Count:
456
Publication Date:
2024-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019090433X
ISBN-13:
9780190904333
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