George van Kooten is the Lady Margarets Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge. His research focuses on New Testament writings in their Graeco-Roman context.
Description
Map of the ancient Near East, first centuries BCE/CE, with places featured in this book
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Timeline of the most important events mentioned in this book
1. Mark—‘Good News’: Inner Catharsis as the Third Way Between Religion and Politics
2. Matthew—Beyond the Roman West and the Parthian East: The ‘Kingdom of Heaven’ and its Constitution|
3. Luke—‘The Way of Peace’: The Gospel as Journey Through the World
4. John—Spectators of the Truth: The Incarnation of the Logos on the Stage of Life
5. Conclusion: The Circular Ripples of Jesus’ Historical Impact
List of Illustrations
Index of Names and Subjects
Index of Biblical References
Reviews
“In this rich and wide-ranging study, George van Kooten offers a new interpretation of the origins of the Gospels, the relationships between them, and their visions of the ‘good news’ of Jesus Christ, and draws fresh insights from them for the present day. A beautifully written book which offers food for thought for scholars, students and people of faith alike.”
—Teresa Morgan, Yale Divinity School & Department of Classics, USA
“George van Kooten’s new work highlights that each Gospel can be understood independently to explore its cultural, historical and literary perspectives. He suggests that consistently situating the Gospels within their own Sitz im Leben enhances our understanding of their influence on contemporary contexts. As van Kooten explains, the influence of Jesus’ historical significance radiates outward in circles within the canonical Gospels, offering a framework for interpreting them in both historical and modern contexts.”
—Johnson Thomaskutty, United Theological College, India
“No reader of the Bible can fail to learn from this historical and cultural exploration of the New Testament Gospels. George van Kooten draws on both classical and biblical studies to produce a vivid and exciting guide to texts that have become both overfamiliar and overanalysed. Like the Gospels themselves, this book not only invites but enables the reader to re-think their life and discover afresh the person and message of Jesus. Scholarly without being antiquarian, it is a feast for the mind and a challenge to the soul.”
—Stephen Cherry, Dean of Chapel, King’s College, Cambridge, UK
“The volume puts on sparkling display George van Kooten’s special gift for challenging conventional wisdom and defamiliarizing the commonplace. His invitation to reconsider the relative chronology of the Gospels is informed by a muscular historicism wielded in the interest of the Bible’s contemporary relevance.”
—Ingo Gildenhard, Classics, University of Cambridge, UK
“In times of crisis and conflict, someone arose who was seen as the son of Zeus. He stole the hearts of many people, not as a revolutionary, but as a saviour. George van Kooten has done something unthinkable: he has breathed new life into the ancient, over-interpreted story of the Gospels. He takes us on a whirlwind journey through the turbulent times of Roman Israel and shows us how the person of Jesus was perceived in his own time: as an answer to the religious, political and cultural problems and questions that people were struggling with. This well- researched book, underpinned by both theology and history, is not only a delight to read, but also truly warms the soul, for researchers and believers alike.”
—Beatrice de Graaf, History of International Relations, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
—Teresa Morgan, Yale Divinity School & Department of Classics, USA
“George van Kooten’s new work highlights that each Gospel can be understood independently to explore its cultural, historical and literary perspectives. He suggests that consistently situating the Gospels within their own Sitz im Leben enhances our understanding of their influence on contemporary contexts. As van Kooten explains, the influence of Jesus’ historical significance radiates outward in circles within the canonical Gospels, offering a framework for interpreting them in both historical and modern contexts.”
—Johnson Thomaskutty, United Theological College, India
“No reader of the Bible can fail to learn from this historical and cultural exploration of the New Testament Gospels. George van Kooten draws on both classical and biblical studies to produce a vivid and exciting guide to texts that have become both overfamiliar and overanalysed. Like the Gospels themselves, this book not only invites but enables the reader to re-think their life and discover afresh the person and message of Jesus. Scholarly without being antiquarian, it is a feast for the mind and a challenge to the soul.”
—Stephen Cherry, Dean of Chapel, King’s College, Cambridge, UK
“The volume puts on sparkling display George van Kooten’s special gift for challenging conventional wisdom and defamiliarizing the commonplace. His invitation to reconsider the relative chronology of the Gospels is informed by a muscular historicism wielded in the interest of the Bible’s contemporary relevance.”
—Ingo Gildenhard, Classics, University of Cambridge, UK
“In times of crisis and conflict, someone arose who was seen as the son of Zeus. He stole the hearts of many people, not as a revolutionary, but as a saviour. George van Kooten has done something unthinkable: he has breathed new life into the ancient, over-interpreted story of the Gospels. He takes us on a whirlwind journey through the turbulent times of Roman Israel and shows us how the person of Jesus was perceived in his own time: as an answer to the religious, political and cultural problems and questions that people were struggling with. This well- researched book, underpinned by both theology and history, is not only a delight to read, but also truly warms the soul, for researchers and believers alike.”
—Beatrice de Graaf, History of International Relations, Utrecht University, The Netherlands

