Jewish Law in Gentile Churches: Halakhah and the Beginning of Christian Public Ethics
Why did the Gentile church keep Old Testament commandments about sex and idolatry, but disregard many others, like those about food or ritual purity? If there were any binding norms, what made them so, and on what basis were they articulated? In this important study, Markus Bockmuehl approaches such questions by examining the halakhic (Jewish legal) rationale behind the ethics of Jesus, Paul and the early Christians. He offers fresh and often unexpected answers based on careful biblical and historical study. His arguments have far-reaching implications not only for the study of the New Testament, but more broadly for the relationship between Christianity and Judaism.

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Jewish Law in Gentile Churches: Halakhah and the Beginning of Christian Public Ethics
Why did the Gentile church keep Old Testament commandments about sex and idolatry, but disregard many others, like those about food or ritual purity? If there were any binding norms, what made them so, and on what basis were they articulated? In this important study, Markus Bockmuehl approaches such questions by examining the halakhic (Jewish legal) rationale behind the ethics of Jesus, Paul and the early Christians. He offers fresh and often unexpected answers based on careful biblical and historical study. His arguments have far-reaching implications not only for the study of the New Testament, but more broadly for the relationship between Christianity and Judaism.

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Jewish Law in Gentile Churches: Halakhah and the Beginning of Christian Public Ethics

Jewish Law in Gentile Churches: Halakhah and the Beginning of Christian Public Ethics

by Markus Bockmuehl
Jewish Law in Gentile Churches: Halakhah and the Beginning of Christian Public Ethics

Jewish Law in Gentile Churches: Halakhah and the Beginning of Christian Public Ethics

by Markus Bockmuehl

Hardcover

$220.00 
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Overview

Why did the Gentile church keep Old Testament commandments about sex and idolatry, but disregard many others, like those about food or ritual purity? If there were any binding norms, what made them so, and on what basis were they articulated? In this important study, Markus Bockmuehl approaches such questions by examining the halakhic (Jewish legal) rationale behind the ethics of Jesus, Paul and the early Christians. He offers fresh and often unexpected answers based on careful biblical and historical study. His arguments have far-reaching implications not only for the study of the New Testament, but more broadly for the relationship between Christianity and Judaism.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780567087348
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/20/2000
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Markus Bockmuehl teaches biblical and early Christian studies in the University of Oxford, UK, where he is Dean Ireland’s Professor and a Fellow of Keble College. His approach stresses the symbioses of history with theology, of Christianity alongside Judaism, and of exegesis in and as reception especially of the first three Christian centuries. Among his authored books are Seeing the Word: Refocusing New Testament Study (2006), Simon Peter in Scripture and Memory (2012), and Ancient Apocryphal Gospels (2017). Recent publications also include Creation ex Nihilo (2018, ed. with Gary A. Anderson), Austin Farrer (2020, ed. with Stephen Platten), and the English translation of Wolfram Kinzig’s Christian Persecution in Antiquity (2021).

Table of Contents

Part One: Christianity in the Land of Israel
Halakhah and Ethics in the Jesus Tradition
Matthew's Divorce Texts in the Light of Pre-Rabbinic Jewish Law
'Let the Dead Bury Their Dead': Jesus and the Law Revisited
James the Just and Antioch

Part Two: Jewish and Christian Ethics for Gentiles
Natural Law in Second Temple Judaism
Natural Law in the New Testament
The Noachide Commandments and New Testament Ethics

Part Three: The Development of Public Ethics
The Beginning of Public Ethics
Jewish and Christian Public Ethics in the Early Roman Empire

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