The Christians Who Became Jews
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Acts of the Apostles and Ethnicity in the Roman City
Christopher Stroup
Price: $65.00
When considering Jewish identity in Acts of the Apostles, scholars have often emphasized Jewish and Christian religious difference, an emphasis that masks the intersections of civic, ethnic, and religious identifications in antiquity. Christopher Stroup’s innovative work explores the depiction of Jewish and Christian identity by analyzing ethnicity within a broader material and epigraphic context. Examining Acts through a new lens, he shows that the text presents Jews and Jewish identity in multiple, complex ways, rather than as a simple foil for Christianity.
Stroup convincingly argues that when the modern distinctions among ethnic, religious, and civic identities are suspended, the innovative ethnic rhetoric of the author of Acts comes into focus. The author of Acts leverages the power of gods, ancestry, and physical space to legitimate Christian identity as a type of Jewish identity and to present Christian non-Jews as Jewish converts through the power of the Holy Spirit.
“By looking at the intersection of literary and archeological evidence, Christopher Stroup helpfully reframes the question of whether Acts is pro-Jewish or anti-Jewish and complicates common understandings of ethnicity as a fixed category distinct from religious and civic affiliations. This is a must read for anyone interested in the development of early Christian identity and its relationship to Judaism.”—Brittany E. Wilson, Duke University Divinity School
Publication Date: April 21, 2020