★★★★
This
is a big book, 593 pages, but over half of it is a reprint of
scripture. After an introduction, Borg goes book-by-book through the New
Testament, providing a few pages of overview for each, primarily
discussing its historical context, and then presenting the Biblical
text. Borg's contributions are a little sparse and offered without much
argument, so if you're looking for exhaustive commentary, that's not his
purpose.
Also,
do not imagine that scholars have some kind of universal agreement
about when each of the N.T. books were written! Borg humbly admits there
is no consensus, and in places, admits his opinion differs from the
majority. In general, Borg dates many of the books just a little later
than I do. For example, he follows the recent trendy dating of
Luke/Acts well into the second century, while I remain unconvinced and
still date these two books around 85-95. And, of course, we won't agree
on Revelation, since in my own book I rely heavily on a historical-critical
interpretation to place its date right around the year 80 CE, which
differs from almost every New Testament scholar.
But
while there's no exact consensus, that's not really the point. The
point of Borg's book is to portray how Christianity evolved in its
earliest years, as evidenced in the writings we have in our Bible.
Indeed, the New Testament itself is an evolutionary outgrowth of the Old
Testament. Quite a bit of the discussion centers on Paul, and on the
letters written in his name, as this is where the most serious change
occurs over the span of the New Testament ... issues like the role of
women in the church and of how to regard Christian slaves like Philemon.
Overall,
I enjoyed the book but found few surprises, and the reading went fast
since I didn't take time to reread all of the scripture.
Terry, I received an email of a comment you posted here, that doesn't seem to show. If you are looking to reach me, I'm at lharmon@thewayithappened.com
ReplyDelete--Lee