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{en} Resurrection, Hell and the Afterlife: Body and Soul in Antiquity, Judaism and Early Christianity (2016) is a book by Mark T. Finney.

Abstract

"This book begins by arguing that early Greek reflection on the afterlife and immortality insisted on the importance of the physical body whereas a wealth of Jewish texts from the Hebrew Bible, Second Temple Judaism and early (Pauline) Christianity understood post-mortem existence to be that of the soul alone. Changes begin to appear in the later New Testament where the importance of the afterlife of the physical body became essential, and such thoughts continued into the period of the early Church where the significance of the physical body in post-mortem existence became a point of theological orthodoxy. This book will assert that the influx of Greco-Romans into the early Church changed the direction of Christian thought towards one which included the body. At the same time, the ideological and polemical thrust of an eternal tortuous afterlife for the wicked became essential."--Publisher description.

Editions

Published in New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

Contents

Afterlife in antiquity: post-mortem existence in its Greco-Roman context -- Biblical beginnings: death and afterlife in the Hebrew Bible -- The priority of the soul: constructions of afterlife in second temple Judaism -- Life after death in additional Jewish literature: the Dead Sea scrolls and later rabbinic thought -- New Testament beginnings: afterlife in the thought of the Apostle Paul -- The priority of the body: post-mortem existence in the later New Testament -- The rise of Gehenna: afterlife in early Christianity -- What the developments of hell in its Jewish and Christian contexts.

External links

  • [ Google Books]

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current00:32, 23 July 2018Thumbnail for version as of 00:32, 23 July 2018333 × 499 (20 KB)Gabriele Boccaccini (talk | contribs)

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