Digital Logos Edition
Martin Hengel gathers an encyclopedic amount of material, ancient and modern, to present an exhaustive survey of the early course of Hellenistic civilization as it related to developing Judaism. The result is a highly readable account of a largely unfamiliar world which is indispensable for those interested in Judaism and the birth of Christianity alike. An extensive section of notes and bibliography is included.
“Something fundamentally new arose in ‘Hellenism’—through the encounter of Greece with the Orient—which differed from the time of classical Greece, just as Judaism—and here we return to our theme—underwent a gradual but deep-rooted change in the Hellenistic period through its encounter and conflict with the social, political and spiritual forces of this epoch, on the basis of which it differs in essential points from its earlier forms in the Old Testament.” (Volume 1, Pages 2–3)
“dominated public and economic life in Egypt as virtually the only written language is shown by the Zeno correspondence” (Volume 1, Page 58)
“we find almost exclusively Greek inscriptions in Palestine” (Volume 1, Page 58)
“the persecution under Antiochus IV in II Maccabees” (Volume 1, Page 2)
Hengel’s fine book is a freshly thought-out and thoroughly researched study which cuts across the customary network of traditional opinion and unsubstantiated guesswork.... This will certainly be a standard work for decades to come.
—James Barr
Hengel writes with equal mastery on the political, economic, intellectual, and religious aspects of the encounter between the Jews and the Greeks and has succeeded admirably in presenting the detailed information essential for the appraisal of the period without ever allowing the momentum of his argument to be lost.
—P.R. Ackroyd
Martin Hengel presents here, in a fine English translation, an excellent, comprehensive study of the impact of Hellenism on Judaism in the intertestamental period. Hengel has mastered all the primary material and given us a new, synthetic picture of the encounter, at all its different levels.
—Choice
Martin Hengel, Ph.D., is Emeritus Professor of New Testament and Early Judaism for the University of Tuebingen, Germany. He is the author of many books including Victory Over Violence & Was Jesus a Revolutionist?, Between Jesus and Paul, Judaism and Hellenism, Studies in the Gospel of Mark and The Hellenization of Judea in the First Century After Christ. Dr. Hengel’s most recent books include Paul Between Damascus and Antioch (together with Anna Maria Schwemer) and The Four Gospels and the One Gospel of Jesus Christ.
1 rating
Lee Weissel
8/30/2022
Bobby Terhune
9/23/2019