Difference between revisions of "Two Powers in Heaven: Early Rabbinic Reports about Christianity and Gnosticism (1977 Segal), book"

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==External Links==  
[[Category:Scholarship]]  
[[Category:Scholarship]]  
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[[Category:Books|1977 Segal]]  
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[[Category:English language|1977 Segal]]
[[Made in the 1970s|1977 Segal]]

Revision as of 07:46, 10 December 2009

Two Powers in Heaven (1977) is a book by [(Alan F. Segal]].

Abstract

As the title suggests, Segal here explores the rabbinic heretics who believed in “two powers in heavens.” Using rabbinic and extra-rabbinic sources, he argues that the heresy originated in early biblical theophanies that pictured God as a man, such as Daniel 7:9, or confused YHWH with an angel. Later, he highlights how this heresy and the polemics leveled against it informed later rabbinic understandings of Christianity. Christians, like the rabbinic heretics who believed in “two powers in heaven,” also believed in two deities, God the Father and Christ the Logos. Consequently, the Rabbis deemed Christians not to be monotheists, leading to the split between the religions. An intriguing exploration in the history of religious developments, Segal's work also highlights the relationship between this belief system and later Jewish-Christian-Gnostic polemic. – Deborah Forger, University of Michigan

Editions and translations

Published in Leiden: Brill, 1977.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents Preface List of Abbreviations

  • Part One: Introduction
  • Part Two: The Early Rabbinic Evidence
  • Part Tree: The Extra Rabbinic Evidence and Conclusions

Bibliography Indices

External Links

1977 Segal