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The Other Christs Imitating Jesus In Ancient Christian Ideologies Of Martyrdom Candida R Moss

  • SKU: BELL-2257258
The Other Christs Imitating Jesus In Ancient Christian Ideologies Of Martyrdom Candida R Moss
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The Other Christs Imitating Jesus In Ancient Christian Ideologies Of Martyrdom Candida R Moss instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2 MB
Pages: 334
Author: Candida R. Moss
ISBN: 9780199739875, 0199739870
Language: English
Year: 2010

Product desciption

The Other Christs Imitating Jesus In Ancient Christian Ideologies Of Martyrdom Candida R Moss by Candida R. Moss 9780199739875, 0199739870 instant download after payment.

The martyrs in early Christian texts are consistently portrayed as Christ figures. Their words, actions, and deaths are modeled on the person and work of Jesus. As such they provide us with insights into the interpretation and use of scripture in geographically diverse locations and a variety of social settings in a period for which there are lamentably few sources. Moss begins by tracing out the theme of imitating Jesus through suffering in the literature of the Jesus movement and early church and its application in martyrdom literature. She demonstrates the importance of imitating the sufferings of Christ as a practice and ethos in the Jesus movement. She then proceeds to the interpretations of the martyr's death and afterlife. Moss argues against the dominant theory that the martyr's death was viewed as a sacrifice, finding that in their post-mortem existence martyrs continue to be assimilated to Christ, closely resembling the exalted Christ as intercessors, judges, enthroned monarchs and banqueters. The characterization of the martyr as "another Christ" ultimately conflicted with emerging theological commitments to Christ's uniqueness and the egalitarian nature of post-mortem existence for his followers. But for a brief period, Moss finds, the martyr's imitation was viewed as a way in which he or she shared in the status of the exalted Christ. Winner of the 2011 John Templeton Award for Theological Promise.

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