Synopses & Reviews
Justin Marc Smith argues that the gospels were intended to be addressed to a wide and varied audience. He does this by considering them to be works of ancient biography, comparative to the Greco-Roman biography. The earliest Christian interpreters of the Gospels did not understand their works to be sectarian documents. Rather, the wider context of Jesus literature in the second and third centuries points toward the broader Christian practice of writing and disseminating literary presentations of Jesus and Jesus traditions as widely as possible.
Smith addresses the difficulty in reconstructing the various gospel communities that might lie behind the gospel texts and suggests that the 'all nations' motif present in all four of the canonical gospels suggests an ideal secondary audience beyond those who could be identified as Christian.
Synopsis
Justin Marc Smith challenges the consensus that the gospels were written for individual communities, by considering the biography genre as intended to reach the largest possible audience.
About the Author
Justin M. Smith is Assistant Professor in the Religion and Philosophy department at Azusa Pacific University, USA.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
1. Assessing the Relationships Between Gospel Genre and Audience
2. Proposing a New Typology for Greco-Roman Biography: Genre, Sub-genre and Questions of Audience
3. Crafting Authority in the Patristic References to Gospel Origins: Authoritative People, Authoritative Places and Authoritative Gospels
4. Avoiding Cross-Generic Comparisons: The Role of Genre in Assessing Audience in Non-Canonical and Canonical Gospels
5. Defining Gospel Audiences: Gospel Communities, Gospel Audiences and ‘Focused B???
6. Envisaing Gospel Audiences in Space and Time: Contemporary B??? and the Gospels for 'All Nations'
Appendix: Introduction
Appendix 1. Graeco-Roman Biography (Biographical Literature) (5th Century BCE - 4th Century CE)
Appendix 1.1. Typologies For Graeco Roman Biography
Appendix 1.2. Relational Typology for Graeco-Roman Biography (Selected Examples)
Appendix 2. Comparison of Structural Elements in Biographical Prefaces and the Prefaces in the Historical and Scientific Traditions 187
Appendix 2.1. Discussion of Selected Biographical Prefaces with the Structural Elements of the Scientific Prefaces
Appendix 3. Synoptic Presentation of the ‘All Nations Motif in the Canonical Gospels
Bibliography
Index