The author discusses the first-century biblical writers and outlines the major realities they faced as they shaped the New Testament political history, forms of religious expression, institutions, scriptural interpretation, and the mythic significance of evil.
This is a great little introduction to the political and religious atmosphere of New Testament times. I read this 2002 revised edition which I picked up at a Christian campus bookstore, where it is sold as a textbook.
The political setting begins with Alexander the Great and continues on into the time of Herod the Great and his descendants. It discusses competing Jewish sects (Pharisees, Sadducees, etc.), Hellenistic philosophies (Stoicism, the Cynics, and Neopythagoreanism), early Gnosticism, and the Imperial Cult. It delves into the social and family setting in Palestine and the Diaspora, and explains the role of the Temple. It talks about modes of scriptural interpretation (such as midrash) and the influence of Philo and the rabbis. It concludes by attempting to describe (for most of us can at best only imagine) a worldview which accommodates angels, demons, and other supernatural explanations in a dualistic world, and the eschatological expectations held by the Jews. Into this atmosphere strode Jesus.
It’s short, not at all in depth, but very good as an intro to the times.
A helpful and well written survey on the topic. Although I don’t agree with all of his assumptions or conclusions, I found in his chapters several insights that I have not gleaned from other works on this subject.
Admittedly not the easiest read, but "World" more than makes up for this by being absolutely chock-full of relevant and clear historical information. Most historical-critical or socio-rhetorical works on biblical studies are overly-wrought, 800+ page tomes of information, but Roetzel's little book is slim, the topics are clear, and the way each relates to the text of the NT is extremely helpfully outlined. I highly, highly recommend this little book for those interested in biblical studies, and I'm sure I will be referring back to this one for quite a while.
Published in 1985, this is the kind of book that could easily have become dated in the past 35 years. But Roetzel has kept to the essentials. While some details may have to be updated, by and large this is a useful introduction to the world in which the New Testament authors found themselves. Roetzel's theological commitments rarely show themselves (until the last chapter), but they don't interfere with the usefulness of the book. Recommended for someone who wants a brief introduction to the Greco-Roman world of the first century.
Learned some helpful things about first century Palestinian Culture and Judaism at shaped the NT world. I would have liked a little more expansion in the role of apocalyptic literature, and the various economic classes, but what I got was not bad.
Good book, in an academic-textbooky kind of way. Lots of insight into The Greek, Roman, and Hebraic cultures in which the books of the NT were written.