Jesus and His Promised Second Coming

EERDMANS TRADEISBN: 9780802879905

Jewish Eschatology and Christian Origins

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By Tucker S Ferda, Foreword by Dale C Allison Jr
Imprint: EERDMANS TRADE
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
239 x 163 mm
Weight:
890 g
Pages:
564

Description

Tucker S. Ferda is Errett M. Grable Associate Professor of New Testament Exegesis and Early Christianity at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. His research interests include the Gospels, the historical Jesus, the history of New Testament research, Second Temple Judaism, eschatology, and hermeneutics. He is the author of Jesus, the Gospels, and the Galilean Crisis and Jesus and His Promised Second Coming: Jewish Eschatology and Christian Origins.

Reviews

"Tucker Ferda's work makes a crucial contribution to the place of eschatology in historical Jesus research and early Christian studies. His challenge to entrenched scholarly assumptions illuminates complex and problematic processes of intellectual history while modelling rigorous, perceptive analysis in both exegesis and reception. Ferda successfully demonstrates that the expectation of Jesus's return deserves renewed scholarly attention as an authentic element of his teaching rather than a post-Easter counsel of apologetic convenience." --Scottish Journal of Theology "An excellent and thought-provoking work, whose exegetical erudition is matched by sensitive historical imagination, critical analysis, and immersion in the history of interpretation. Readers studying this book carefully will learn a great deal about the history of NT scholarship, the eschatological perspectives of NT texts, and how to reason judiciously about historical matters. . . . Scholars interested in Second Temple Jewish and early Christianity eschatology cannot ignore this book, and anyone interested in Jesus will be greatly challenged by it." --Religious Studies Review "Ferda's arguments are more complex than this review can summarize. . . I find his work both admirably researched and persuasive. This book also aligns with my own far less well-considered inclinations." --J. Gordon McConville in Interpretation "This volume is a brilliant model of what the critical study of Jesus should involve--careful exegesis, methodological savvy, provocative suggestions, sober judgment, historical imagination, mastery of the secondary literature, plus knowledge of the history of the discipline and its place within larger cultural developments. Jesus and His Promised Second Coming is, without question, one of the best and most important books on Jesus in the last quarter century." --from the foreword by Dale C. Allison Jr. "This work is sure to set the cat among the pigeons about a long-time consensus among students of the historical Jesus: Jesus did not expect his Second Coming; that expectation was, rather, an invention of the early church. Ferda argues to the contrary that an expectation of end-time return is in line with the rest of Jesus's eschatology and that scholarly skepticism about it reflects post-Enlightenment prejudice rather than sound historical method. He makes his case well, both in analyzing scholars' presuppositions and arguments and in mining ancient Jewish and Christian sources. Whether or not they end up agreeing, subsequent historians will not be able to ignore this challenging counter-thesis." --Joel Marcus, professor emeritus of New Testament and Christian origins, Duke Divinity School "The New Testament and its early readers expected Jesus to return from heaven and attributed this expectation to Jesus himself. Historians of Jesus, however--even before the supposed eighteenth-century beginnings of Jesus historiography--are largely unable or unwilling to discuss this expectation as an aspect of Jesus's self-understanding. Ferda charts an intrepid course through this tension that leads the way to understanding not just Christian origins and eschatology but also the man from Nazareth and his receptions. I needed to read this book." --Rafael Rodriguez, professor of New Testament, Johnson University "Historical Jesus research is such a rat's nest that only a few exceptional minds--one thinks, for instance, of E. P. Sanders, Paula Fredriksen, and Dale Allison--seem competent to pull it off. With this fascinating book, Tucker Ferda adds his name to this distinguished company. Ferda makes a powerful case that the idea of the second coming plausibly goes back to Jesus's own meditatio mortis, and he challenges all comers to try to prove otherwise. A book not to be trifled with." --Matthew V. Novenson, Helen H. P. Manson Professor of New Testament, Princeton Theological Seminary "In this fascinating book, Tucker Ferda tackles an old question in historical Jesus research from a fresh perspective. Contrary to common views, he relates the expectation of Jesus's second coming not to later interpretation, but to Jesus himself. In a thorough and erudite study of the history of reception, Ferda shows that the dissociation of Jesus's second coming from his own teaching derives from an anti-Jewish prejudice that goes back as far as the ancient Adversus Iudaeos tractates. This book challenges a consensus in Jesus scholarship with groundbreaking observations and arguments. It deserves a firm place in future discussions on the subject." --Jens Schroeter, professor of New Testament and ancient Christian apocrypha, Humboldt University of Berlin

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