The Pseudepigraphal Letters to the Thessalonians
By (Author) Linda Maloney
By (author) Marlene Crsemann
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
9th July 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Criticism and exegesis of sacred texts
227.8106
Paperback
376
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
526g
Marlene Crsemann examines the Thessalonian letters in the context of Jewish-Christian social history; building upon her analysis of 1 Thessalonians, Crsemann comes to the conclusion that it is post-apostolic epistolary communication, and questions whether it is a letter of Paul and indeed whether it is an early letter. This analysis in turn adds weight to the thesis, propounded by some previous scholars, that the letter is somewhat out of place and may be a later work by another author. Crsemann subsequently illustrates that 2 Thessalonians, by contrast, revokes the far-reaching social separation from Judaism that characterizes 1 Thessalonians, and thus aims socio-historically at a solidarity with the entire Jewish people. Analysing the concept of the Jews as supposed enemy, the future of the Greek gentile community, and the relationship between the two letters, Crsemann concludes that the discussion about a "divergence of the ways of Christians and Jews" in early Christian times needs to be realigned.
Marlene Crsemann is an independent New Testament scholar based in Germany. She is one of the editors of Bible in Fair Language (2007). Linda Maloney currently works at College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University, USA.