Iesus Deus :The Early Christian Depiction of Jesus as a Mediterranean God

Publication subTitle :The Early Christian Depiction of Jesus as a Mediterranean God

Author: Litwa   M. David  

Publisher: Fortress Press‎

Publication year: 2014

E-ISBN: 9781451479850

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9781451473032

Subject: B979 History of Christianity

Keyword: 宗教

Language: ENG

Access to resources Favorite

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

Iesus Deus

Description

What does it mean for Jesus to be “deified” in early Christian literature? Although the divinity of Jesus was a topic of profound and contested discussion in Christianity’s early centuries, believers did not simply assert that Jesus was divine; in their literature, they depicted Jesus with the specific and widely-recognized traits of Mediterranean deities. Relying on the methods of the history of religions school and ranging judiciously across Hellenistic literature, M. David Litwa shows that at each stage in their depiction of Jesus’ life and ministry, early Christian writings from the beginning relied on categories drawn not from Judaism alone, but on a wide, pan-Mediterranean understanding of deity: how gods were born, how they acted to manifest power, even how they died----and, after death, how they were taken up into heaven and pronounced divine. Litwa’s samples take us beyond the realm of abstract theology to dwell in the second- and third-century imagination of what it meant to be a god and shows that the Christian depiction of Christ was quite at home there.

Chapter

“Not through Semen, Surely”

“From Where Was this Child Born?”

Deus est iuvare

“Light Was That Godhead”

“We Worship One who Rose from His Tomb”

The Name Above Every Name

Conclusion

Bibliography

Index

The users who browse this book also browse


No browse record.