Warren Carter is Meinders Professor of New Testament at Phillips Theological Seminary, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He is the author of numerous books.
"A world-class scholar of the New Testament in its Roman imperial
context, Warren Carter now brings decades of research to a broader
audience. His well-chosen narrations of Roman social and political
relations reveal new aspects of Gospel stories. For students of the
Bible who aren't sure why they should learn about its surrounding
empires, there's no better guide than Carter."
--Michael Peppard, author of The Son of God in the Roman World
"Carter has made an outstanding contribution to New Testament
studies with a resource accessible to scholar and student alike. By
identifying moments of interaction between the Gospels and their
Roman imperial context, Carter demonstrates how the Gospels are
culturally embedded documents that negotiate their imperial context
in a variety of ways. In this fresh, people's-history approach,
Carter centers the voices of the non-elite and exposes systems of
power in both the Roman Empire and our own."
--Anna M. V. Bowden, Albion College
"Warren Carter carefully and clearly, persuasively and expertly
demonstrates the significant ways the Roman Empire shaped the
writers of the New Testament. The reader will learn much here about
the historical contexts and intertextual resonances that nurtured
the theological imagination of the New Testament writers. Even
more, Carter calls readers of the New Testament today toward a
fuller reflection on the ways a persistent imperial imagination
continues to misshape our sense of the world, its resources, and
the God who calls us to an altogether different kingdom than
empire's feeble promises."
--Eric D. Barreto, Princeton Theological Seminary
"Drawing his vast knowledge of the Roman Imperial world, Carter
masterfully demonstrates how indispensable that world is for
understanding the New Testament Gospels. This introductory text for
students and non-specialists should be a required reading in any
undergraduate or graduate course on the Gospels."
--Adam Winn, University of Mary Hardin-Baylor College of Christian
Studies
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