Religious Diversity in the Graeco-Roman World
By (Author) Rabbi Dan Cohn-Sherbok
By (author) John M. Court
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
1st March 2005
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
200.9015
Paperback
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Over the last hundred years there has been a great deal of interest in the nature of religious diversity in the Graeco-Roman World and a variety of scholars have attempted to untangle the complexities of reliogious interaction and conflict. For students of this period there is a need for an introduction to this vast field of scholarship. This book makes a comprehensive survey of this field of enquiry. The first three chapters deal with Judaism: Palestinian Judaism, Diaspora Judaism and Essenes. Philip Esler's account of Palestinian Judaism draws particular attention to the introduction of the analytic methods of social-scientific research to religious research. The next three chapters form a triptych of studies on Christianity, examining in turn the Jesus of history, the apostle Paul, and the early church The final group of three contributors are concerned with religious diversity within the pagan and syncretistic phenomena of the Roman world, treating political, philosophical and practical aspects in the legacy of Greek religion, in Gnosticism, and in Mithraism as an example of the Mystery Religions.
Dan Cohn-Sherbok is Emeritus Professor of Judaism, University of Wales, UK. John M. Court is Honourary Senior Research Fellow, University of Kent, Canterbury, England.