What Are the Gospels?
In this work Dr Burridge contends that scholarly study of the genre of the Gospels has gone full circle over the last century of critical scholarship. The question of how the Gospels should be categorised is still a vexed one and - surprisingly - there is still no consensus. This book analyses and evaluates the debate over the course of the last century. It shows that while the nineteenth-century assumption that the Gospels could be likened to biographies has been denied by the mainstream scholarship of this century, in recent years a biographical genre has begun to be assumed once more. Dr Burridge provides a good foundation for the re-introduction of this biographical view of the Gospels by comparing the work of the Evangelists to the development of biography in the Graeco-Roman world, and by drawing on insights from literary theory. The author shows that the view that the Gospels are unique, which is still widespread among biblical scholars, is false: a first-century reader would have seen the Gospels as biographies, or 'Lives' of Jesus, and they must therefore be interpreted in this light.
Product details
March 1992Hardback
9780521412292
306 pages
224 × 145 × 22 mm
0.488kg
Unavailable - out of print November 1994
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Part 1. The Problem:
- 1. Historical survey
- 2. Genre criticism and literary theory
- 3. Genre criticism and Graeco-Roman biography
- 4. Evaluation of recent debate
- Part 2. The Proposed Solution:
- 5. Generic features
- 6. The generic features of early Graeco-Roman biography
- 7. The generic features of later Graeco-Roman biography
- 8. The Synoptic Gospels
- 9. The Fourth Gospel
- 10. Conclusions and implications
- Notes
- Verbal analysis charts
- Bibliography
- Index.