Judaism in the New Testament: Practices and Beliefs 
By Bruce Chilton, Jacob Neusner
Publisher: Routledge 1995-11-20 | 224 Pages | ISBN: 0415118441 | PDF |1.3 MB

In Judaism in the New Testament, Bruce Chilton and Jacob Neusner, the most 
prolific author writing in English today, contend that, contrary to 
conventional wisdom, early Christians identified not as Christians, but as 
Jews. Drawing upon parts of the Gospels, the Letters of Paul, and the Letters 
to the Hebrews, Neusner and Chilton read the early Christianity as a formation 
of Judaism--a comprehensive, religious system that is nothing short of a Judaic 
account of Holy Israel.

Bound to be controversial, Neusner, an accomplished Talmudic scholar and 
Chilton examine the New Testament as a statement of the Torah of Sinai.

This important work provides a provocative and trenchant critique of existing 
scholarship that seeks to view Christianity as autonomous from Judaism. By 
examining Christianity as an extension of Judaism, Neusner and Chilton place 
Christianity in its proper historical, literary and religious context.

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