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After the New Testament

The Writings of the Apostolic Fathers

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The writings that make up the New Testament stand at the very foundation of Christianity. But while Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and the other books of the New Testament are known to almost everyone, the writings that Christians produced in the decades that followed these earliest compositions remain shrouded in virtual anonymity. Who were the Apostolic Fathers? Why were they given that name? And what windows into the shaping of Christianity's canon, church hierarchy, and creed are opened for us with an understanding of works that include the letters of 1 Clement or Ignatius, the Didache of the Apostles, or the Letter to Diognetus? These 24 lectures introduce what is considered the most important collection of post-New Testament writings. Although largely unknown and unread, these writings provide a treasure trove of insights into Christianity, and they are crucial to understanding the development of a religion that was shaped largely outside the pages of the New Testament itself. From the struggle for power and the beginnings of church hierarchy to electrifying 19th-century discoveries, this course is an extremely useful addition to the shelves of anyone who is fascinated by the history of ancient Christianity and its evolution into the dominant religion it is today.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      This lecture series isn't as successful as others from The Teaching Company. Professor Ehrman is clearly knowledgeable about the writers who shaped early Christianity and does a fine job of explaining how their influence on the church is still important today. However, the lectures need a bit more detail; furthermore, the content itself may not suit audio presentation. Ehrman's delivery is clear and his pacing solid, but he repeats himself, dropping in similar explanations or anecdotes in multiple lectures. His explanations of the doctrinal disputes in the early church are fascinating in themselves, but he often focuses so much on the doctrines that it's difficult to get a sense of them in context: why would these doctrinal arguments appeal to people in the various historical periods covered? G.T.B. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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