Divine Embodiment in Philo of Alexandria

Updated by: 
Shiran Shevah
Research notes: 
SHS/not checked/20/05/2018
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Forger, Deborah
year: 
2018
Full title: 

Divine Embodiment in Philo of Alexandria

Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Journal for the Study of Judaism
Volume: 
49
Issue / Series Volume: 
2
Abbreviated Series Name: 
JSJ
Pages: 
223-262
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

Because later polemics established Jews and Christians as binary opposites, distinguished largely by their views on God’s body, scholars have not sufficiently explored how other Jews in the early Roman period, who stood outside the Jesus movement, conceived of how the divine could become embodied on earth. The first-century Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria often operates as the quintessential representative of a Jew who stressed God’s absolute incorporeality. Here I demonstrate how Philo also presents a means by which a part of Israel’s God could become united with human materiality, showing how the patriarchs and Moses function as his paradigms. This evidence suggests that scholarship on divine embodiment has been limited by knowledge of later developments in Christian theology. Incarnational formulas, like that found in John 1:14 were not the only way that Jews in the first and second century CE understood that God could become united with human form.

URL: 
http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/10.1163/15700631-12491160
Label: 
28/05/2018
Record number: 
103 629