Introduction; 1. Cosmology and eschatology; 2. Universalism & particularism; 3. Wisdom as action; 4. Poverty and humility; 5. Debt remission in the Matthean Lord's prayer; 6. Paul: Spirit, flesh, and the household; Conclusion; Bibliography.
When taken together the diverse writings found at Qumran and in the New Testament demonstrate participation in a common wisdom worldview.
Benjamin Wold is Associate Professor of Early Judaism and Christianity at Trinity College Dublin, University of Dublin. His research has been supported by awards from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Wold is the author of Women, Men, and Angels and 4QInstruction: Divisions and Hierarchies (2018).
'The fresh analysis of this significant study rests on the recent
scholarly insistence that the majority of compositions found in the
Qumran caves reflect wider intellectual and spiritual tendencies in
late Second Temple Judaism than those associated with one sect
alone. Through attention to fine details, Ben Wold discloses
convincingly how several sections of James, Matthew and the Pauline
Letters resonate with Jewish wisdom motifs broadly conceived. New
light is shed on cosmology, perfection, poverty, humility, debt
remission, flesh and household codes, both in well-known texts and
also in those not so familiar. An exemplary presentation of how the
Scrolls and the New Testament can illuminate one another.' George
J. Brooke, Rylands Professor Emeritus of Biblical Criticism and
Exegesis, University of Manchester
'In this volume, Wold offers a series of studies that treat early
Jewish traditions and those found in some New Testament writings as
conversation partners, in which each is given a welcome integrity
while being allowed to function in a mutually illuminative way. In
this regard, Wold's work departs from making theological-religious
significance depend on whether or not generative influence can be
determined. This maturely written, winsomely readable contribution
reflects the best of contemporary engagement with ancient sources
and lays out paths that forthcoming research can follow. A
challenging and constructive book!' Loren T. Stuckenbruck,
Professor of New Testament, University of Munich
'In detailed studies enhanced with text-critical insight and
linguistic acumen, Wold shows how reading Wisdom texts from Qumran
published in the late 1990s together with the Epistle of James, the
Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7), Romans, Colossians, and
Ephesians advance understanding of how Jewish texts employ the
language of poverty and perfection, how they received Genesis 2-3
in terms of both parents and children and husbands and wives, and
how they understand particularism and universalism, cosmology
and eschatology, belief and action. Careful, creative, clear, and
compelling, the volume neatly complicates the traditional
categories of Judaism and Hellenism, wisdom and apocalyptic, flesh
and spirit, sin and debt, even the human and the divine.' Amy-Jill
Levine, Mary Jane Werthan Professor of Jewish Studies and New
Testament, Emerita, Vanderbilt University
'Wold's thoughtful and iconoclastic work begins to rethink
everything we think we thought we already knew about wisdom in
early Judaism and the New Testament. It's a tour de force of close
reading, material philology, and big consequences for the study of
ancient literature.' Garrick Allen, Senior Lecturer in New
Testament Studies, University of Glasgow
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |