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Introducing the Apocrypha: Message, Context, and Significance, 2nd ed.

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ISBN: 9781493413089
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$39.99

Overview

This comprehensive, up-to-date introduction to the Old Testament apocryphal books summarizes their context, message, and significance. It is the most substantial introduction to the Apocrypha available and has become a standard authority on the topic. The new edition has been substantially revised and updated throughout to reflect the latest scholarship.

Key Features

  • 2nd Edition provides helpful updates based on a wealth of recent research
  • Answers common questions about the Apocrypha
  • Helps readers understand the historical and theological value of the Apocrypha

Contents

  • Introduction: The Value of the Apocrypha
  • Historical Context: “The Yoke of the Gentiles”
  • Tobit: “Better Is Almsgiving with Justice”
  • Judith: “Hear Me Also, a Widow”
  • Greek Esther: “The Aid of the All-Seeing God and Savior”
  • Wisdom of Solomon: “The Righteous Live Forever”
  • Wisdom of Ben Sira: “In All Wisdom There Is the Doing of Torah”
  • Baruch: "Return with Tenfold Zeal to Seek God”
  • Letter of Jeremiah: “They Are Not Gods, So Do Not Fear Them”
  • Additions to Daniel: “Let Them Know That You Alone Are God”
  • 1 Maccabees: “The Family through Which Deliverance Was Given”
  • 2 Maccabees: “There Is Some Power of God about the Place”
  • 1 Esdras: “Leave to Us a Root and a Name”
  • Prayer of Manasseh: “The God of Those Who Repent”
  • Psalm 151: “He Made Me Shepherd of His Flock”
  • 3 Maccabees: “Blessed Be the Deliverer of Israel!”
  • 2 Esdras: “The Mighty One Has Not Forgotten”
  • 4 Maccabees: “Noble Is the Contest”

Top Highlights

“A second compelling reason for studying these texts is that the authors of the New Testament themselves show signs of a high degree of familiarity with this literature and evidently place a high value upon it.” (Page 8)

“A third reason that impels us to study these writings is that they were formative for early Christian theology, a heritage shared by Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox Christians.” (Page 12)

“A first reason that motivates us to study these books is that they contribute to a fuller, more reliable picture of the Judaism of 200 BCE to 100 CE.” (Page 6)

“Although the books of the Apocrypha are not recited as Scripture in the New Testament, Jesus, Paul, James, and others show significant familiarity with the contents of many books of the Apocrypha, especially Ben Sira, Wisdom, Tobit, and 1 and 2 Maccabees.” (Page 22)

“Exile became an occasion for reexamination and reshaping what it meant to be Jewish” (Page 33)

Praise for the Print Edition

David deSilva’s Introducing the Apocrypha remains the best book in the field. These important writings are placed in full context—historically, religiously, and literarily. Again and again deSilva shows how the books of the Apocrypha clarify important themes and traditions in the teaching of Jesus and in the literature of the early church. The revised edition is rich with insight and will serve well a new generation of students and scholars.

Craig A. Evans, John Bisagno Distinguished Professor of Christian Origins, Houston Baptist University

David deSilva offers a readable and competent introduction to these complex and neglected writings. This is the best one-volume introduction to the apocryphal, or deuterocanonical, books currently available in English.

Jeremy Corley, lecturer in Sacred Scripture, St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, Ireland

It is still customary in some quarters of the church to assume that not much happened between the time the last portion of the Old Testament was written and the first events of the New Testament era began. This in fact is not true, and indeed anyone who reads David deSilva’s fine introduction to the Old Testament Apocrypha will realize that the period was a fertile one for Jewish writers dealing with issues ranging from theodicy to justice to wisdom. DeSilva does a fine job in fluid prose of introducing Christian readers to these books and helping them understand the context from which the Judaism of Jesus’ day (and his followers’) arose. Highly recommended.

Ben Witherington III, professor of New Testament, Asbury Theological Seminary

Product Details

About David A. deSilva

David A. deSilva (PhD, Emory University) is Trustees’ Distinguished Professor of New Testament and Greek at Ashland Theological Seminary in Ashland, Ohio. He is the author of more than twenty-five books, including An Introduction to the New Testament: Contexts, Methods, and Ministry Formation, and has been involved in several major Bible translation projects.

Sample Pages from the Print Edition

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  1. Paul

    Paul

    2/7/2023

$39.99