Religion, Ethnicity, and Way of Life: Exploring Categories of Identity
Horrell, DG
Date: 11 February 2021
Journal
Catholic Biblical Quarterly
Publisher
Catholic Biblical Association of America (CBA)
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Recent scholarship has raised questions about some of the most basic categories
traditionally used in the discipline of New Testament studies (and related fields),
notably that of ‘religion’, which has been argued to be anachronistic for the ancient
world. The category of ‘ethnicity’ has been proposed as a more appropriate label ...
Recent scholarship has raised questions about some of the most basic categories
traditionally used in the discipline of New Testament studies (and related fields),
notably that of ‘religion’, which has been argued to be anachronistic for the ancient
world. The category of ‘ethnicity’ has been proposed as a more appropriate label for
Judaism (or Judean identity) of the time, though the early Christian movement is less
often seen in these terms. However, both categories are shown to be modern
constructions which cannot be neatly separated or unproblematically applied to early
Jewish and Christian sources. In an attempt to avoid – or at least expose – some of the
problems of such categorisations, the study focuses on terms related to ‘way of life’,
exploring some of the ways in which both Jewish and early Christian depictions of
joining or leaving fit within this broad category. The results do not imply that we can
dispense with our modern analytical categories, but they do suggest that distinct
categorisations as either ‘religious’ or ‘ethnic’ are unlikely to prove convincing, and
cannot form a basis for distinguishing the category of Jewish/Judean ‘ethnic’ identity
from that of early Christian identity.
Classics, Ancient History, Religion and Theology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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