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The Johannine Corpus in the Early Church
 
 

The Johannine Corpus in the Early Church [Paperback]

Charles E. Hill (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0199291446 978-0199291441 June 1, 2006
The books traditionally associated with John the Apostle constitute a major portion of the Christian New Testament. The influence of these books, particularly the Gospel according to John and the book of Revelation, has been immense both in Christianity and in Western culture. This study provides a fresh examination of how these books were accepted--or not accepted--in the early Church, and in so doing demonstrates why long-held theories about them must be discarded and replaced.

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Editorial Reviews

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"...a fascinating overview of all relevant material concerning the question of possible uses of John during the second century. Hill obviously has provided an important and challenging piece of scholarship. Current and future scholars working on the Johannine corpus or on the early Christian reception of New Testament texts definitely will have to refer to Hill's book." -- Theological Studies


"...a meticulous examination of the evidence for possible use of the Gospel and other Johannine writings. Hill's careful study is clearly a significant scholarly contribution that any students of the second century will have to take extremely seriously." - The Journal of Religion


"Hill's ambitious project is remarkably successful. It is to be applauded as a timely correction of current scholarship. The bold outline of his thesis is entirely compelling."--Westminster Theological Journal


"Seldom does one encounter a book that both challenges so trenchantly perspectives advocated by so many and makes the case so persuasively."--The Catholic Biblical Quarterly


About the Author


Charles E. Hill is Professor of New Testament at the Reformed Theological Seminary in Orlando, Florida.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 552 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (June 1, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0199291446
  • ISBN-13: 978-0199291441
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,089,362 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Essential Corrective to Current Johannine Thought, June 2, 2005
Over the course of the last several years, Chuck Hill has emerged as one of best conservative patristic scholars around. This particular book is the fruit of extensive study and scholarly battles regarding the reception of the Johannine corpus by the early church. It is a book that in many respects will demand engagement from those interested in Johannine studies within the scholarly world.

Many average evangelicals are blissfully ignorant of the direction Johannine studies have gone in. The accepted paradigm for decades within mainstream NT scholarship has been that the Apostle John wrote none of the NT books traditionally attributed to him. Further, the very gospel (John's) that evangelicals in particular often adore the most is the same gospel that, according to most scholars, was considered highly gnostic by the early church, and this was the reason for its very late canonicity. According to this paradigm, 1 John was written after the Fourth Gospel to provide a correct interpretation of the Fourth Gospel in order to redeem it from the gnostics, and this is the only reason it got into the canon. Raymond Brown, in particular, has been the crucial advocate of this position, and his paradigm has become the dominant interpretation of how the Johannine corpus came into being.

In this book, Hill accomplishes a number of things. Most importantly, he goes a long way towards setting Brown's paradigm on its head. Hill convincingly demonstrates that not only was the Fourth Gospel embraced by the orthodox church prior to Irenaeus, but also that the gnostics were far less enthusiastic about the Fourth Gospel than Brown and others have conjectured. If Hill is correct, then not only is the prevailing paradigm wrong about the acceptance of the Fourth Gospel by the early church, it is also wrong about the purpose behind the writing of 1 John.

Unlike prevailing scholarship, Hill takes the early church witness seriously in formulating his proposals. It is an accepted practice within NT and patristic scholarship circles to dismiss the truthfulness of Irenaeus as it relates to his relevant musings concerning John's writings and their purpose. Thankfully, Hill does not embrace such a cavalier attitude toward Irenaeus. As is the usual Hill style, the early church citations and analysis in this book is thorough, careful, and responsible. Hill is smart enough to know that a proposal that takes issue with the accepted thinking demands exhaustive documentation and formulation. This is clearly achieved here. The reader will be particulary informed by Hill's chronological treatment of the progression of thought in Johannine studies that have gotten us to this point. Very informative and succinct.

With prevailing scholarship dismissing the possibility of Johannine authorship of the Johannine corpus, coupled with the increasing agnosticism regarding who John is writing against in the Johannine epistles in particular (as well as the Fourth Gospel), much of traditional orthodox thinking regarding the Johannine corpus has been completely undermined. Most evangelicals are completely unaware of any of this, or even that a number of evangelical scholars have bought into certain aspects of this thinking. Hill provides a needed antidote, and brings us back to a place where the acceptance of the Johannine literature can be examined from a position of evidence rather than convenient speculation. Though one wishes that Hill himself was a bit less coy regarding his own views about Johannine authorship, this book takes an important first step in responsibly advancing a conservative position that takes the early church witness seriously, and challenges the accepted paradigm with intellectual integrity. This should prove to be a standard evangelical work in Johannine studies for years to come, and is highly recommended for NT professors, seminary students, and pastors.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Reference work, October 29, 2010
This review is from: The Johannine Corpus in the Early Church (Paperback)
Since Walter Bauers's Rechtgläubigkeit und Ketzerei im ältesen Christentum (Tübingen, 1934) an important scholar trend deems that the Johannine corpus met in the Early Church the suspicion and avoid of the orthodox due to its presence and importance in gnostic milieu. Hill names this alleged antique attitude `orthodox Johannophobia' (11), and challenges the general trend holding this position over more than four hundred pages of demonstration divided in two main parts. The first part contains a historiographical presentation of past scholarship concerning this matter, from Bauer to Nagel (11-55) and an argument for the present book (56-71). The remainder of the book is also divided in two, of which the first is a detailed analysis of the presence of the Johannine writings in texts of the second century that forms the bulk of the book (73-446), while the second explores the evidence for their common use as a corpus in the same era (447-75). The volume also contains a chronology (476), a bibliography (478-98), and three indexes: ancient texts, modern authors and a subject index (499-531).
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The subject of the formation of the New Testament canon is of perennial interest among both students and practitioners of Christianity. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Asia Minor, New Testament, Nag Hammadi, Clement of Alexandria, Johannine Gospel, Gospel of Thomas, Gospel of Peter, Justin Martyr, Son of God, Apostolic Fathers, Ignatius of Antioch, Gospel of Mark, New York, Sibylline Oracles, Trimorphic Protennoia, Gaius of Rome, Muratorian Fragment, Old Testament, Revelation of John, Epistula Apostolorum, Grand Rapids, Johannine Apocalypse, Odes of Solomon, Mark's Gospel, Melito of Sardis
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