BOOKS DISCUSSED IN THIS REVIEW
Penguin, 193 pp., $14.00 (paper)
Stanford University Press, 160 pp., $48.00; $19.95 (paper)
Stanford University Press, 197 pp., $53.00; $20.95 (paper)
Stanford University Press, 111 pp., $17.95 (paper)
Continuum, 526 pp., $21.95 (paper)
Polity, 233 pp., $22.95 (paper)
Verso, 339 pp., $26.95
Paris: Gallimard, 185 pp., €16.00 (paper)
Routledge, 170 pp., $17.95 (paper)
Tertullian called Saint Paul 'the apostle of the heretics' and he was right. Ever since Marcion, the second-century theologian who thought Paul taught that the Christian God was a deity wholly distinct from and superior to the Hebrews' Yahweh, the Pauline corpus has been creatively misread. It is hard to find much in Jesus' Sermon on the Mount to inspire heretical thoughts, but Paul's epistles, with their powerful intimations about sin, grace, and imminent redemption, are another matter.
Review, 4571 words
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