In these distinguished Oxford lectures, Theissen picks up where he left off in The Historical Jesus (1998). Employing the notion of religion as a "cultural sign language which promises a gain in life by corresponding to an ultimate reality," he plots the emergence of Christianity as a religion, with elements of myth, ritual, ethics, and an emergent symbolic system. He expands upon the historical, social, and theological analysis of his earlier works to cover such issues as the relationship of Jesus to the earliest churches, power, possessions, interpretations of Jesus' death, and the separation of the church and synagogue.
Theissen's most complete and systematic treatment of early Christianity to date
Traces the gradual emergence of the most important beliefs about Jesus
Encompasses beliefs, ethics, ritual, and the origin of the New Testament canon in one synthesis
All of the products displayed on this website are supposed to be Christian.
However, occasionaly some products get added and slip through our automated content filters unnoticed by our Admins.
If you notice anything that shouldn't be here, please help us out and let us know by clicking the following button: