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Baylor-Mohr Siebeck Studies In Early Christianity

Love as "Agape": The Early Christian Concept and Modern Discourse

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In our fraught global environment, when political and ideological lines are drawn ever sharper and old allegiances are increasingly strained, love for neighbor as both individual and societal obligation needs to be thematized and justified anew. At the same time, the New Testament call to love one's enemies forms a sharp point of contrast to the current non-culture of hatred for all things different and foreign.

Oda Wischmeyer's Love as Agape: The Early Christian Concept and Modern Discourse, the ninth volume in the Baylor-Mohr Siebeck Studies in Early Christianity series, aims to bring the New Testament concept of love into conversation with the current discussion about love. Wischmeyer investigates the commandment tradition of love for God and for neighbor, the ways in which the Septuagint and Plutarch speak of love, and the innovative concepts of love developed by Paul and John. She also presents an exegetically informed construction of the New Testament concept of love that is sharpened through a penetrating comparison with counter-, parallel, and alternative concepts from the ancient world. The book brings this holistic biblical vision forward into critical and constructive dialogue with key contemporary visions of love, including those of Julia Kristeva, Martha Nussbaum, Pope Benedict XVI, and Simon May. The tension that emerges stresses the need for fresh conceptualizations of ancient Jewish-Christian understandings, giving rise to the concluding question of the profile, limits, and impulses of the agape ἀγάπη concept for present challenges.

Through this academically rigorous and pastorally sensitive exploration, Wischmeyer points to the great love story between God and humanity, which realizes itself in the figure of Jesus Christ. This divine romance places love as the most intense, affirming, and life-creating relationship in God's own self, a relationship into which human beings are drawn and by which they obtain special dignity when God's love becomes their life.

335 pages, Hardcover

Published August 15, 2021

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704 reviews20 followers
July 14, 2022
With the recent translation of this work by Oda Wischmeyer, a German NT scholar, the reader is treated to her explication of love as agape. She describes agape as more than ethical or emotional. Rather, it is an eschatological concept which incorporates many of the elements of what we think as love. Overall, her conclusions are sound and her comparison of agape in the NT with contemporary opposites (e.g., death, hate) and complements (e.g., discipleship) as well as with modern conceptions of love, which overall seek to avoid the transcendent origins of agape provide much food for thought. The reason for a 4-star rating (I'm a generous reviewer) is that some of her writing (or perhaps the translation) was a bit torturous to read. Also, some of her exegesis was a bit odd and off the mark. Thankfully, these exegetical misses did not detract from the overall useful of this monograph.
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