Christ Groups and Associations

BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781481318211

Foundational Essays

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Edited by Richard S. Ascough
Imprint:
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
228 x 152 mm
Weight:
360 g
Pages:
432

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Description

Richard S. Ascough is Professor of Religion Queen's University in Kingston, Canada.

Introducing the Conversation, by Richard S. Ascough Part One: Initiating the Conversation (1866-1927) 1 St. Paul and the Pagan Guilds (1927), by Thomas Wilson 2 Religious Legislation of the Period (1905), by Ernest Renan 3 Bishops and Deacons (1881), by Edwin Hatch 4 Christianity and the Collegia (1906), E. G. Hardy 5 Edwin Hatch, Churches, and Collegia (1993), by John S. Kloppenborg 6 On the Exegetical Interest in Ancient Associations in the 19th and 20th Centures (2006), by Thomas Schmeller Part Two: Reanimating the Conversation (1960-1984) 7 Unofficial Associations: Koinonia (1960), by E. A. Judge 8 Patrons and Officers in Club and Church (1977), by William L. Countryman 9 Christianity as a Burial Society (1984), by Robert L. Wilken 10 A Hellenistic Cult Group and the New Testament Churches (1981), by S. C. Barton and G. H. R. Horsley 11 The Formation of the Ekklesia (1983), by Wayne A. Meeks Part Three: Moving the Conversation Forward (1999-2013) 12 Paul's House Churches and the Cultic Associations (1999), by James Harrison 13 Voluntary Associations and the Formation of Pauline Churches: Overcoming the Objections (2006), by Richard S. Ascough 14 Roman Legislation on Associations and Christian Communities (2002), by Markus OEhler 15 Christ-Bearers and Fellow-Initiates: Local Cultural Life and Christian Identity in Ignatius' Letters (2003), by Philip A. Harland 16 Membership Practices in Pauline Christ Groups (2013), by John S. Kloppenborg

overall this is a tremendous boon to scholars working on the question of how these groups help us understand the emergence of Christian communities in the first century. --Patrick Gray, Rhodes College "Religious Studies Review" One must commend Ascough for another excellent contribution to the study of associations and early Christianity, on which he has now been publishing for some twenty-five years. --Timothy A. Brookins "Review of Biblical Literature"

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