Beyond Canon: Early Christianity and the Ethiopic Textual Tradition

Full title
Beyond Canon: Early Christianity and the Ethiopic Textual Tradition
Updated By
Research notes

RAC/not checked/12/11/2023

Reference type
Author(s)
Gebreananaye, Meron
Watson, Francis
Williams, Logan
Year
2020
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Library of New Testament Studies
Issue / Series Volume
643
Abbreviated Series Name
LSTS
Publisher
T&T Clark
Place of Publication
London
Work type
Label
13/11/2023
Abstract

This book highlights the significance of a group of five texts excluded from the standard Christian Bible and preserved only in Ge'ez, the classical language of Ethiopia. These texts are crucial for modern scholars due to their significance for a wide range of early readers, as extant fragments of other early translations confirm in most cases. Yet they are also noted for their eventual marginalization and abandonment, as a more restrictive understanding of the biblical canon prevailed – everywhere except in Ethiopia, with its distinctive Christian tradition in which the concept of a “closed canon” is alien.

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In focusing upon 1 Enoch, Jubilees, the Ascension of Isaiah, the Epistula Apostolorum, and the Apocalypse of Peter, the contributors to this volume group them together as representatives of a time in early Christian history when sacred texts were not limited by a sharply defined canonical boundary. In doing so, this book also highlights the unique and under-appreciated contribution of the Ethiopic Christian Tradition to the study of early Christianity.

Notes

Paperback reprint 2022, Bloomsbury Academic