Lexington Books / Fortress Academic
Pages: 330
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-9787-0216-5 • Hardback • April 2018 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
978-1-9787-0217-2 • eBook • April 2018 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Neil Elliott is senior acquiring editor in biblical studies for Lexington Books/Fortress Academic.
Werner H. Kelber is Isla Carroll and Percy E. Turner professor emeritus in biblical studies at Rice University.
Crossing Bridges, Crossing Boundaries: Introducing the VolumeNeil Elliott- Women in the Early Christian Stories: Serving and Served, Rural and Urban, in Occupied and Pacified Provinces
Antoinette Clark Wire- The Jesus Movement in Historical Context: Attempt at a Comparative Social History
Gerd Theissen- Who Are the Q Scribes? Questioning the Village Scribes Hypothesis
Alan Kenneth Kirk- Betwixt Past and Present: Jesus and John in Tradition, Text, and History
Rafael Rodríguez- The Apostle Paul and the Spiral of Roman Violence
James R. Harrison- Minding the Gaps: Reflecting on the Fantasy of People’s History in the Study of Christian Origins
Davina C. Lopez- Communication in Context: Jesus Movements and the Construction of Meaning in the Media World of the First Century
Holly E. Hearon- When Bridges Fail Us: Studying Economic Realities in the New Testament World
Neil Elliott- The Intellectual and Social Impact of an Engaged Scholar: Richard A. Horsley’s Legacy
Noelle Damico - Taking the Measure of Richard A. Horsley’s Scholarly Achievement
Werner H. Kelber
These essays are more than a simple celebration and synthesis of Horsley’s work. They invite readers to think further about methodological issues in NT studies, to extend boundaries beyond the historical-critical investigation of the biblical texts and to fully participate in unfolding the tension between text and history.— Journal for the Study of the New Testament
Biblical scholars, pastor-theologians, and laity will find this book on New Testament scholarship a breath of fresh air. Honestly, I have a number of books on the New Testament, and I have yet to find the interesting array of such topics as presented here. Did the contributors advance the research agenda and methodologies proposed by the Richard A. Horsley? It is safe to say each contributor affirmed Horsley’s agenda that was stated at the outset.
— Reading Religion
This volume is altogether welcome. For many years now Richard Horsley has been engaged in the task of political criticism. This he has always done with one eye on the ancient world and the other on the modern and postmodern worlds. The volume not only sets such work wonderfully in context but also advances, in its own right, many of its various prongs. I cannot think of a better tribute to his life and his work. For political criticism, moreover, this work is simply indispensable.— Fernando F. Segovia, Oberlin Graduate Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity, Vanderbilt University
The wide ranging intellect, focused passion, and keen imagination that characterize Richard A. Horsley’s scholarship generate and energize the authors of these essays. Conceptualized and introduced with Neil Elliott’s methodological insight and care, this volume advances the conversation about biblical studies that is self-aware and constructive. Activists and contemplatives, historians and theologians, scholars and preachers will find much to inspire and motivate them in this collection.— Cynthia Briggs Kittredge, Dean, Seminary of the Southwest
The essays in this volume engage and advance Richard Horsley’s interdisciplinary approach to a political exegesis of the New Testament on a wide range of topics, including people’s history, social memory, economics, media, conflict, and power, to name a few. It is a fitting tribute to an activist scholar who has changed the landscape of New Testament studies by provoking a conversation about the social and political history and significance of the Jesus and Pauline tradition in ways that has invited the contributions of others.— Raymond Pickett, Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary