Charles Puskas has extensive experience in university and seminary
teaching, academic publishing, and parish ministry. He is the
author of Hebrews, the General Letters, and Revelation (Cascade,
2016), The Conclusion of Luke-Acts (Pickwick, 2009), An
Introduction to the New Testament (second edition with C. Michael
Robbins; Cascade, 2011), and The Letters of Paul (second edition
with Mark Reasoner, 2013).
C. Michael Robbins is adjunct professor emeritus of religion and
philosophy in the Haggard School of Theology at Azusa Pacific
University. He is the author of The Testing of Jesus in Q (2007)
and with Steve Johnson has helped revise James Allen Hewett's New
Testament Greek, with CD-ROM (2009).
"The book fills a lacuna in Johannine scholarship. While
interpreters often one-sidedly follow a certain contextualization,
Jewish or Greco-Roman, the authors present the whole set of
possible backgrounds, many of which are not mutually exclusive. The
sober discussion helps to go beyond former limitations and to
arrive at a synthetic understanding of John's various reading
contexts."
--Jörg Frey, University of Zurich
"The Fourth Gospel, with compelling drama, complex imagery,
scriptural citations and allusions, and engagement with serious
conceptual issues, invites comparison with ancient literary
sources, both Jewish and Greek. Puskas and Robbins offer a
well-organized review of comparative material that may illuminate
the Gospel. Well-documented and offering a probing critical
framework, Conceptual Worlds offers an extremely useful tool for
students of John both new and old."
--Harold W. Attridge, Yale Divinity School
"As an advance over narrow, monodisciplinary approaches to the
Fourth Gospel, this multidisciplinary analysis of the conceptual
backgrounds and foregrounds of the Fourth Gospel by Charles Puskas
and Michael Robbins offers a much-needed way forward. In displaying
multiple parallels between Jewish and Hellenistic writings and the
Gospel of John, today's readers are well equipped to appreciate
more fully how John's original audiences would have perceived and
experienced its message. Here, John's interfluential dialogical
autonomy is clearly displayed. As an autonomous memory of Jesus and
his ministry, John's dialogues with other gospel traditions, the
Septuagint and other Jewish writings, and even Hellenistic
religions and literature are laid out chapter after chapter,
illuminating its rhetorical thrust and message for readers in front
of the text both then and now. A must-read for historical,
theological, and literary readings of the Fourth Gospel today."
--Paul N. Anderson, George Fox University and North-West
University, South Africa
"While the Fourth Gospel provides a unique portrait of Jesus and
his ministry, its ideas and vocabulary did not develop in a vacuum.
Rather, the milieu in which the Gospel developed is rich and
complex. Puskas and Robbins have generated a substantive and
compelling volume that explores the Gospel in light of its
potential influences and conversation partners in the ancient
world. This text will prove useful for advanced courses on the
Fourth Gospel."
--Christopher W. Skinner, Loyola University Chicago
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |