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Christians and Jews in First-Century Alexandria
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2011
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Krister Stendahl represents, to my mind, the very best of Scandinavian-style “realistic interpretation” of the Bible, resolutely faithful in his exegesis to the historical situation of the text and its author but then marvelously insightful in eliciting from the text a fresh and sometimes surprising address to contemporary issues in church and society. As is well known, it is precisely Stendahl's interest in relations between Jews and Christians (Jewish and Gentile) that has made so much of his New Testament work so stimulating and innovative. As it happens, though, his research has tended to concentrate geographically on that large sweep of territory “from Jerusalem and as far round as Illyricum.” What I want to do in this article in his honor is to explore an area relatively untouched by my teacher—Alexandria—in an effort to see if anything can be said of Jewish-Christian relations there in the first century. In doing this I must perforce extend our investigation mainly to noncanonical sources. Even so the task is formidable, for the first-century Alexandrian church is, as Stendahl says, something “about which we know nothing.” What follows is, therefore, largely a matter of inference, at least insofar as it bears upon first-century Christianity in Alexandria. Insofar as it bears upon first-century Judaism, that giant among Jewish exegetes and philosophers, Philo Judaeus, will play a substantial role.
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References
1 See esp. The Bible and the Role of Women (trans. Sander, Emilie T.; Facet Books, Biblical Series 15; Philadelphia: Fortress, 1966)Google Scholar. He comments on “realistic interpretation” of the Bible in Sweden on p. 10. The best statement of his position on the difference between exegesis and hermeneutics is his now classic article on “Biblical Theology,” IDB 1. 418–32, now reprinted in Meanings: The Bible as Document and Guide (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1984) 11–44.Google Scholar
2 Rom 15:19. I am thinking mainly of Stendahl's incisive contributions to scholarship on Matthew and Paul.
3 See Paul Among Jews and Gentiles (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1976) 70.Google Scholar
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7 Apostates: Virt. 182; Vit. Mos. 1.30–31; De spec. leg. 3.29. Proselytes: Virt. 182; Quaest. in. Ex. 2.2. In Virt. 175–86 Philo discusses the process of conversion to Judaism. On this and other important texts and their relation to the early Christian mission to Gentiles see Borgen, Peder, “The Early Church and the Hellenistic Synagogue,” StTh 37 (1983) 55–78.Google Scholar
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11 The LXX of Num 24:7a reads: “There shall come a man from his (Israel's) seed, and he shall rule over many nations” (my translation).
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16 Hist. eccl. 2.17.2.
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22 See now Janssens, Yvonne, Les Leçons de Silvanos (NH VII, 4) (Bibliothèque copte de Nag Hammadi, Section “Textes,” 13; Québec: Université Laval, 1983) esp. 23.Google Scholar
23 Bauer perversely attempts to put Barnabas in the Gnostic camp (Orthodoxy and Heresy, 47–48), but the gnosis of Barnabas has virtually nothing to do with the gnosis of the Gnostics. On gnosis in Barnabas see, e.g., Kraft, Robert A., Barnabas and Didache (The Apostolic Fathers: A New Translation and Commentary 3; Toronto: Nelson, 1965) 22–27.Google Scholar
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25 Stendahl, Krister, The School of St. Matthew and its Use of the Old Testament (2d ed.; Philadelphia: Fortress, 1968) 17 n. 5.Google Scholar
26 He refers in this connection to “evolved literature,” and the reproducing and reworking of older materials. See Barnabas and Didache, 1–22.
27 In Studies in the Apostolic Fathers, 41–55, esp. 47.
28 Ibid.
29 Ibid., 47–51.
30 Barnard, “St. Stephen and Early Alexandrian Christianity,” 63–69. As Barnard points out, the term is taken from Isa 3:10 (LXX). Cf. also Wis 2:12, an Alexandrian text.
31 Ibid., 71–72.
32 Barnard entertains this as a possibility, suggesting also the possibility of an Alexandrian origin for Stephen, but finally prefers to “err on the side of caution” with the other solution. However, I cannot find any trace elsewhere in Barnabas of the use of Acts.
33 Cf. Philo Migr. Abr. 89–93, and n. 6, above.
34 On the eschatology of Barnabas see Kraft, Didache and Barnabas, 27–29.
35 Barnard, “Judaism in Egypt,” 52–55.
36 School of St. Matthew, xi–xiv; cf. also Barnard, “Judaism in Egypt,” 52, 55.
37 On the messianist nature of that revolt see esp. Hengel, Martin, “Messianische Hoffnung und politischer ‘Radikalismus’ in der jüdisch-hellenistischen Diaspora,” in Hellholm, David, ed., Apocalypticism in the Mediterranean World and the Near East (Proceedings of the International Colloquium on Apocalypticism, Uppsala, August 12–17, 1979; Tübingen: Mohr-Siebeck, 1983) 655–86.Google Scholar
38 E.g., warnings against the devil, including the use of the term “the wicked one” (Silv. 85,17; Barn. 2.10; 21.3); the “Two Ways” tradition (Silv. 103,14–26; Barn. 18–20); interiorization of the Temple (Silv. 106,9–14; 109,25–30; Barn. 16.7–10); impossibility of looking at the sun/God (Silv. 101,13–17; Barn. 5.10); fearing God (Silv. 88,9–11; Barn. 10.10–11).
39 See above and n. 24.
40 Perhaps a “Logos christology” is implicit in the references to Christ's role in creation (Barn. 5.5,10; 6.12).
41 Cf. Winston's, David discussion of the genre of Wisdom in his commentary, The Wisdom of Solomon (AB 43; Garden City: Doubleday, 1979) 18–20.Google Scholar
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45 Silv. 112,37–113,7, Peel-Zandee translation in NHLE. Cf. Schoedel, “Jewish Wisdom,” 191–92.
46 Pearson, Birger A., “Philo, Gnosis and the New Testament,” in Logan, A. H. B. and Wedderburn, A. J. M., eds., The New Testament and Gnosis: Essays in honour of Robert McL. Wilson (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1983) 73–89, esp. 81–83.Google Scholar
47 Ibid., esp. 75–77, 83. Cf. my reference to Apollos above.
48 Cf. Zandee, J., ”The Teachings of Silvanus” and Clement of Alexandria: A New Document of Alexandrian Theology (Leiden: Ex Oriente Lux, 1977).Google Scholar
49 Eusebius claims (Hist. eccl 2.17.2) that “he not only knew but welcomed, reverenced, and recognized the divine mission of the apostolic men of his day” (Kirsopp Lake's translation in the LCL ed.).
50 Stendahl remarks that “the United States of today is the first place in the modern world since Philo's Alexandria where Jews and Christians as people, as religious communities, and as learned communities, live together in a manner and in sufficient numbers to allow for open dialogue” (Paul Among Jews and Gentiles, 37).
51 Cf. Tcherikover, “Decline of the Jewish Diaspora,” 31–32.
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