The full text of the New Testament (in the New Revised Standard
Version translation), each book introduced and annotated, plus a
full selection of essays on historical and religious topics (e.g.
the historical background of the Greco-Roman world in the years
leading up to New Testament times).
Contributors
Alan J. Avery-Peck - 2 Corinthians
Herbert Basser - James
Daniel Boyarin - Logos, A Jewish Word: John's Prologue as
Midrash
Marc Zvi Brettler - Editor; The New Testament between the Hebrew
Bible (Tanakh) and Rabbinic Literature
Jonathan Brumberg-Kraus - 3 John
Shaye J. D. Cohen - Galatians; Judaism and Jewishness; Josephus
Michael Cook - Philippians
Pamela Eisenbaum - Hebrews
Michael Fagenblat - Who Is my Neighbor? The Concept of Neighbor in
Jewish and Christian Ethics
Charlotte Elisheva Fonrobert - Judaizers, Jewish Christians, and
Others
David Frankfurter - Revelation
David Friedenreich - Food and Table Fellowship
Julie Galambush - 2 John
Aaron M. Gale - Matthew
Joshua D. Garroway - Jews and Judeans: The Meanings of Ioudaios
Barbara Geller - Philemon
Gary Gilbert - Acts
Martin Goodman - Jewish History, 331 BCE - 135 CE
Leonard Greenspoon - The Septuagint
Michael R. Greenwald - 2 Peter; The Canon of the New Testament
Adam Gregerman - 2 Thessalonians
Maxine Grossman - Ephesians; The Dead Sea Scrolls
Susannah Heschel - Jesus in Modern Jewish Thought
Martha Himmelfarb - Afterlife and Resurrection
Tal Ilan - 2 Timothy
Andrew Jacobs - Jude
Jonathan Klawans - The Law
Naomi Koltun-Fromm - 1 Timothy
Jennifer Koosed - Titus
Ross S. Kraemer - Jewish Family Life in the First Century CE
Shira Lander - 1 Corinthians
Daniel R. Langton - Paul in Jewish Thought
Rebecca Lesses - Divine Beings
David Levenson - Messianic Movements
Amy-Jill Levine
Marc Z. Brettler is Dora Golding Professor of Biblical Studies at
Brandeis University.
"A a magnificent achievement . The Jewish Annotated New Testament
is a marvelously bounteous compilation." --Commonweal
"The Jewish Annotated New Testament makes a wonderful contribution
to Jewish appreciation of the New Testament, on the one hand, and
Christian appreciation of the Jewish dimension of New Testament
literature, Jesus, and his disciples, on the other...We owe [the
editors and their many contributors our thanks for putting together
such a useful and positive contribution to New Testament
interpretation and to much better, more accurate, and fairer
Jewish
and Christian understanding. I recommend this book enthusiastically
and without reservation."--Craig A. Evans, Journal of the Jesus
Movement in its Jewish Setting
" An historic volume of extraordinary scholarship that can
transform Christian-Jewish relations. . . . A must-read for both
clergy and laity. . . . A significant achievement."
--Rabbi A. James Rudin, Senior Interreligious Advisor, The American
Jewish Committee
" This exciting collection by leading Jewish scholars not only
annotates the New Testament but also brings out its themes,
context, and interpretation over the centuries. Essential for
libraries of scholars in Christian-Jewish studies, academic
institutions offering degrees in theology, and dialogue groups at
all levels."--Dr. Eugene J. Fisher, Distinguished Professor of
Catholic-Jewish Studies, Saint Leo University; Former Associate
Director, Secretariat for
Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs, U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops
" One volume must find its way to seminarians, preachers, and other
students of Scripture: The Jewish Annotated New Testament. With
insightful essays and page-by-page notes and sidebars on each book,
this volume fills a huge gap in the world of biblical
interpretation, providing an accessible guide to how this most
Jewish document from antiquity is understood by Jewish scholars
today."--The Rev. William Brosend, School of Theology, Sewanee, TN
and
Executive Director, Episcopal Preaching Foundation
"It is an admirable piece of scholarship. It provides a wealth of
highly relevant context, enriching the cultural and literary as
well as the theological and historical terms in which these
writings of first-century Jews should be approached. The
contributors are tactful and sophisticated in their treatment of
antiquity and respectful of its mysteries. Much contemporary
writing on Scripture is faddish or tendentious. This book is a
disciplined work of
clarification and illumination" -- Marilynne Robinson, Wall Street
Journal
"To see the fruits of the ongoing interchange between Jewish and
Christian biblical scholars, one need look no further than this
volume...this volume shows how the deepening knowledge of late
antique Judaism enriches one's view of the New
Testament."--CHOICE
"A vivid and thick description of issues, practices, ideas, and
events of the Second Temple period, with the Gospels in particular
looking more and more like extensions of Jewish life and
textuality. The result is a bridge of connection between the
cultures, almost to the point of losing sight of the chasms of
(mis)understanding that have divided them for centuries." --Common
Knowledge
"This unique groundbreaking reference book fills a needed void...A
must purchase for any school, synagogue, or university
library."--Association of Jewish Libraries
"This new commentary on the New Testament certainly adds an
important voice to modern NT commentary and is essential reading
not only for biblical scholars but seminarians and
preachers."--Catholic Books Review
"A monument to past achievements in New Testament scholarship and a
beacon for future study...The Annotated Jewish New Testament should
be either a primary text or required accompanying work in every
seminary and upper-division course in New Testament and should
leave its mark on all preaching."--America
"This comprehensive volume provides a more critical and in-depth
look at the Jewish context of the NT for both scholars and
laypeople." --Religious Studies Review
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