Jewish Acts in the polis: ethnic reasoning and the Jewishness of Christians in Acts of the Apostles

This project examines the depiction of Jewish and Christian identity in Acts of the Apostles by placing the writer’s ethnic claims within a broader material and epigraphic context. Scholarship on Jewish identity in Acts has often emphasized Jewish and Christian religious difference, an emphasis that...

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Main Author: Stroup, Christopher R.
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/14558
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-145582019-03-28T06:39:24Z Jewish Acts in the polis: ethnic reasoning and the Jewishness of Christians in Acts of the Apostles Stroup, Christopher R. Religion Acts of the Apostles Jewish identity New Testament Ancient Christianity Ethnic reasoning Material culture This project examines the depiction of Jewish and Christian identity in Acts of the Apostles by placing the writer’s ethnic claims within a broader material and epigraphic context. Scholarship on Jewish identity in Acts has often emphasized Jewish and Christian religious difference, an emphasis that has tended to mask the intersections of civic, ethnic, and religious identifications in antiquity. Such identity categories did not exist as distinct, stable entities. Rather, as discussions of identity in antiquity demonstrate, they were contested, negotiable, and ambiguous. Bringing Acts into conversation with recent scholarly insights regarding identity as represented in Roman era material and epigraphic remains shows that Acts presents Jews and Jewish identity in multiple, complex ways, rather than as a simple foil for “Christianity.” The dissertation argues that when the modern distinctions between ethnic, religious, and civic identities are suspended, the innovative ethnic rhetoric of the author of Acts comes into focus. The underlying connection between ethnic, religious, and civic identities provided him with space to present non-Jewish Christians as converted Jews and therefore to identify all Christians as Jews. On the basis of this identification, he marked Christians as a unified Jewish community that enhanced the stability of the city, contrasting them with other Jewish communities. By creating an internal distinction between Christians and other Jews, he privileged Christians as the members of an ideal, unified Jewish community and contrasted them with what he identified as factious, local Jewish associations. 2016-02-23T15:49:58Z 2016-02-23T15:49:58Z 2016 2016-02-16T02:16:18Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/14558 en_US Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Religion
Acts of the Apostles
Jewish identity
New Testament
Ancient Christianity
Ethnic reasoning
Material culture
spellingShingle Religion
Acts of the Apostles
Jewish identity
New Testament
Ancient Christianity
Ethnic reasoning
Material culture
Stroup, Christopher R.
Jewish Acts in the polis: ethnic reasoning and the Jewishness of Christians in Acts of the Apostles
description This project examines the depiction of Jewish and Christian identity in Acts of the Apostles by placing the writer’s ethnic claims within a broader material and epigraphic context. Scholarship on Jewish identity in Acts has often emphasized Jewish and Christian religious difference, an emphasis that has tended to mask the intersections of civic, ethnic, and religious identifications in antiquity. Such identity categories did not exist as distinct, stable entities. Rather, as discussions of identity in antiquity demonstrate, they were contested, negotiable, and ambiguous. Bringing Acts into conversation with recent scholarly insights regarding identity as represented in Roman era material and epigraphic remains shows that Acts presents Jews and Jewish identity in multiple, complex ways, rather than as a simple foil for “Christianity.” The dissertation argues that when the modern distinctions between ethnic, religious, and civic identities are suspended, the innovative ethnic rhetoric of the author of Acts comes into focus. The underlying connection between ethnic, religious, and civic identities provided him with space to present non-Jewish Christians as converted Jews and therefore to identify all Christians as Jews. On the basis of this identification, he marked Christians as a unified Jewish community that enhanced the stability of the city, contrasting them with other Jewish communities. By creating an internal distinction between Christians and other Jews, he privileged Christians as the members of an ideal, unified Jewish community and contrasted them with what he identified as factious, local Jewish associations.
author Stroup, Christopher R.
author_facet Stroup, Christopher R.
author_sort Stroup, Christopher R.
title Jewish Acts in the polis: ethnic reasoning and the Jewishness of Christians in Acts of the Apostles
title_short Jewish Acts in the polis: ethnic reasoning and the Jewishness of Christians in Acts of the Apostles
title_full Jewish Acts in the polis: ethnic reasoning and the Jewishness of Christians in Acts of the Apostles
title_fullStr Jewish Acts in the polis: ethnic reasoning and the Jewishness of Christians in Acts of the Apostles
title_full_unstemmed Jewish Acts in the polis: ethnic reasoning and the Jewishness of Christians in Acts of the Apostles
title_sort jewish acts in the polis: ethnic reasoning and the jewishness of christians in acts of the apostles
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/14558
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