How did early Christians remember Jesus--and how did they develop their own "Christian" identities and communities? In this accessible and revelatory book, Greg Carey explores how transgression contributed to early Christian identity in the Gospels, Acts, Letters of Paul, and Revelation. Carey examines Jesus as a friend of sinners, challenger of purity laws, transgressor of conventional masculine values of his time, and convicted seditionist. He looks at early Christian communities as out of step with "respectable" practices of their time. Finally, he provides examples of contemporary Christians whose faith requires them to "do the right thing," even when it means violating current definitions of "respectability."
Preface
Chapter 1: "How Do You Know She’s a (Sinner)?"
Chapter 2: Jesus, Friend of Sinners
Chapter 3: Jesus and Impurity
Chapter 4: We Were Deadbeats, Me and Paul
Chapter 5: Jesus the Convicted Seditionist
Interlude: The Sinless Jesus?
Chapter 6: The Scandal(s) of the Cross
Chapter 7: Flirting with Respectability
Chapter 8: Persecuted
Epilogue: Sinners in the Life of the Church
Greg Carey (Ph.D., Vanderbilt University) is Professor of New Testament, Lancaster Theological Seminary. Carey has also written: Ultimate Things: An Introduction to Jewish and Christian Apocalyptic Literature (2005), and Elusive Apocalypse: Reading Authority in the Revelation to John (1999).