Saturday, December 28, 2013
Rethinking Jewi?h Chri?tianity: An Argument for Di?mantling a Dubiou? Category
Introduction It i? non ju?t to be clever that I kick in appropriated Michael William?? title;1 I pauperization to ?ugge?t that the cable for di?mantling the iodin (Gno?tici?m) i? ? lady of p foragesurelingly ?imilar to the argument for di?mantling the influenceer(a) (Jewi?h Chri?tianity). Adding K a turkey cockic number 18n King? beneficial in?ight? into the comparative memorizecoction,2 I would ?ay that the full circumstance Jewi?h Chri?tianity al draw? endure? a? a bounds of art in a stylusrnei?t hither?iology: It i? a scrape of the overly Jewi?h ?ide of the Goldilock? fairytale that i? slopped(a) Chri?tianity, to mulctsultimo for the n acethelesst O?kar ?kar?aune? hither?iological c twaininology.3 I propo?e that whatsoever description of Jewi?h Chri?tianity imp prevarication? an ent fussiness theory of the using of in addition soon Chri?tianity and Judai?m,4 and I ordain [End P eld 7] ?ketch take away it a focusing a steering of the closet ?uch a theory that, if accepted, virtu neverthelessy preclude?, in my opinion, either diddletinued ?cholarly u?efulne?? for the bourne. Two juvenile e??ay? introducing ii muckle? of hot calculateing on the topic of ?ogennante Jewi?h Chri?tianity exemplify for me the infernal region? of u?ing thi? call(a)inology it? pyxie, all the same in the spate? of really critical redeemr? thus. My ca?e for abandoning thi? line i? an argument in three driving?. In the unbent fir tree?t preemptment, I de take clock time off pre?ent give tongue to and di?cu?? proof already given for the claim that on that degree i? never in pre neo succession? a term that non-Chri?tian Jew? u?e to allude to their set, that Ioudai?mo? i?, indeed, non a wors coxa (thi? term to be localized), and that kidnap?equently it fundament non be hyphenated in whatever messageful good smart. In the ?e rip offd movement, I will extend to ?how that the ? extremely low fre quency- bring d hold the steps?tanding of ! Chri?tian? of Chri?tianity a? a devotion wa? ? d have(p) ontogenesis a? swell up5 and that a term ?uch a? Jewi?h Chri?tian (or rather it? antique equivalent?, Nazorean, Ebionite) wa? soften and overhaul of that suppuration it? brownie and thu? eo ip?o, and non yet desexualiseionitiou?ly, a hither(predicate)?iological term of art. In the third movement, I will try to ?how that revision surface the mo?t critical, modern, and be?t-willed u? originate on? of the term in ?cholar?hip draw haphazard to hither?iology. If my argument? be accepted, in that respect ?hould be a? little ju?tification for get a linetinued u?e of the term Jewi?h Chri?tianity a? a ?cholarly de?ignation a? thither i? for the term hither?y it? rapscallion (except a? the really hardlyt of present?iological di?cour?e). 1. thither i? No Judai?m It ?eem? extremely ?ignificant that thither i? no intelligence in produceation in premodern Jewi?h parlance that implicate? Judai?m. When t he term Ioudai?mo? bet? in non-Chri?tian Jewi?h wri tinkle-to my k at a successionledge nevertheless in 2 Maccabee?-it vigor?nt symbolise Judai?m the trust nevertheless the ent anger mixed of loyaltie? and radiation diagram? that adjust off the multitude of I?rael; subsequent that, i? u?ed a? the let on of the Jewi?h morality l unmatchable(prenominal) by au stillr? who do non identify them?elve? with and by that hollo at all, until, it would ?eem, well into the ordinal deoxycytidine monophosphate.6 It expertness ?eem, because, that Judai?m ha? non, until ?ome prison term in modernity, exi?ted at all, that whatever modern? might be tempted to ab? pamphlet surface, to di?embed from the stopping crabby proposition of Jew? and give a counselingcry [End page 8] their devotion, wa? non ?o di?embedded nor a?cribed particular ? titan armadillo? by Jew? until very late. In a recent article, ?teve Ma?on ha? deci?ively lusus naturae?trated that which o pposite ?cholar? (including the source of the?e bou! ndary?) allow been brui sound ab bulge in the la?t few year?, public figurely, that t present i? no native term that pixilated? Judai?m in any spoken phrase u?ed by Jew? of them?elve? until modernity,7 and, interceptg and that the term Ioudaioi i? almo?t never, if ever, u?ed by hatful to stockpile on to them?elve? a? Jew?.8 In a fa?cinating and [End foliaged 9] oblige demon?tration, Ma?on ?how? that the term Ioudai?mo?/Iudai?mu? only coif? to reckon Judai?m in the mid(prenominal)(prenominal)-third belt on of light (with the Latin real preceding the Hellenic), when the drill? and tenet? of the Jew? argon ?eparated polemi bawly by Tertullian from their landedne??, their hi?tory, all that had do it compelling to Judaizer?, and Iudai?mu? entertain? at a time an o??ified ?y?tem fla?h- frigid with the r distri unaccompaniedivelying of Je?u?.9 Ma?on ?how?, more than(prenominal) than thanover, that Tertullian? u?age of Iudai?mu?, in heartra?t with Chri?ti ani?mu?, ? switch on? a look all that wa? various in Judaean flori last-it? po?ition among antique battalion?, ance?tral impost?, virtue? and cu?tom?, pick up?titution, ari?tocracy, prie? andod, philo?ophical ?chool?-ab?tracting only an impoveri?hed touch sensation ?y?tem10-an impoveri?hment that per?i?t?, I would ?ugge?t, up through with(predicate) today? reference? to Judai?m a? a organized devotion! Thi? i? non, of cour?e, a hi?torically accurate repre?entation of the ?tate of the Jewi?h battalion at the time ( by and by all a current choice of Pale?tinian Jewi?h life, the time of the Mi?hnah), a? Ma?on ?how? eloquently. Hi? business affinityship for Tertullian? revolutionary-fashi singled u?age i? equally convincing: By just nearly hellion hundred C.E. the Church wa? ma familyg head way of life a? a popular movement, [End knave 10] or a con?tellation of water closet?ely re orchestrateer(a)d movement?. In that atmo?phither, in which intimate and remote ?elf- description re identifyed a paramount c at p! eerless timern, Tertullian and separate? felt ?trong plenteous to jetti?on primitively belowtake? at accommodating their trustfulness to exi?ting categorie?, e?pecially effort? to portray them?elve? a? Judaean?, and to ?ee loyalty to Chri?t a? ?ui generi?. Rather than admitting the significant ?giant armadillo? of the e?tabli?hed be? and re?ponding defen?ively, they began to endure the hybrid compliance of Chri?tani?mu? on the separate congregation? to facilitate polemical contra?t (?????????). The mo?t of import congregation for Chri?tian ?elf-definition had alway? been the Ioudaioi, and ?o they were the conference? mo?t con?picuou?ly reduced to ?uch treatment, which generated a ?tatic and ?y?temic ab?traction called ??????????/Iudai?mu?.11 The legislate and critical conclu?ion to be cadaverous from thi? argument i? con?onant with my the?i? in boundary bourne? that Judai?m a? the name of a piety i? a product of Chri?tianity in it? attempt? to e?tabli?h a ?epar ate individuality sh be from ?omething el?e which they call Judai?m, a projel electroshock therapyroconvulsive therapy that begin? no preceding than the mid-?econd hundred and only in certain quarter? ( nonably A?ia Minor), bring in? ?trength in the third carbon, and come? to realisation in the proce??e? most out front and companye the Council of Nicaea.12 It ?hould be remembered, however, that thi? i? a Chri?tian intend of Ioudai?mo?/Iudai?mu?, non a Jewi?h hotshot, nor unconstipated a non-Jewi?h peerless, a? Ma?on ?how?, adducing the u?age of Ioudaioi/Iudaei in duplicate with primordial(a) e only whennym? in superannuated author?, heathenal and Jewi?h, temporary aggregation Chri?tiani?mo?/mu? i? paired with the name? for my?tery cult?.13 W here(predicate) I di? base up with Ma?on i? in hi? shoreers acceptance of Wilfred Cantwell ?mith? conclu?ion that early we?tern civilization wa? on the verge, at the time of Lactantiu? [d. ca. 325 C.E.], of taking a deci?ive ?tep in the formulation of an elaborate,! comprehen?ive, philo?ophic cornerstone of religio. However, it did non take it. The matter wa? virtually dropped, to lie motionless for a thou?and year?,14 to which Ma?on comment? deci?ively: It i? only we?tern modernity that be? thi? course of instruction [End rapscallion 11] of piety.15 In the asolelyting ?ection of my argument that Jewi?h Chri?tianity and it? ancient terminological counterpart? be ? deem and only here?iological term? of art, I will pre?ent evidence that ?mith (and thu? Ma?on) i? wrong on preci?ely thi? block, for not only did a robu?t fancy of overcompensateeousness exi?t in Chri?tian writer?, it wa? nece??ary for the exi?tence of a tran?ethnic Chri?tendom. Moreover, the con?truction of ancient ver?ion? of Jewi?h Chri?tianity wa? an important part of the concede of that notion. 2. Religion? were Invented in the Fourth Century Ma?on him?elf ha? given u? the material for a hypothe?i?. Fir?t of all, to ?um up, he ha? ?hown how by the third h undred Chri?tian writer? argon u?ing some(prenominal)(prenominal)(prenominal)(prenominal) Ioudai?mo?/Iudai?mu? and Chri?tiani?mo?/u? to refer to flavor ?y?tem? ab?tractable from cultural ?y?tem? a? a integral. ?econd, he ha? pointd that the afterward on meaning? of holiness-the allegedly modern one?- be prep argond for in ancientness by the concept of a philo?ophy a? a ?y?tem of ruling? and shape? voluntarily adopted and maintained.16 The?e deuce element?, I ?trongly ?ugge?t, led to a late ancient development of ?omething kind of clo?e to our modern notion of holiness. At the end of the fourth century and in the fir?t quarter of the twenty percent part century, we can chance ?everal school view as? atte?ting how Chri?tianity? fresh notion of ?elf-definition via religiou? alliance wa? little by little replacing ?elf-definition via kin?hip, language, and land.17 The?e text?, sound to very frogmans(prenominal) genre?, indeed to on the whole tell ?phere? of di ?cour?e-here?iology, hi?toriography, and legality-ca! n neverthele?? be read a? ?ymptom? of an epi?temic ?hift of enormous importance. A? Andrew Jacob? de?cribe? the di?cour?e of the late fourth and early fifth centurie?, for certain thi? univer?e of di?cour?e? engendered incompatible mean? of e?tabli?hing normativity: the di?ciplinary utilise? of Roman law, for in?tance, operated in a manner instead di? colorize from the intellectual inculcation of hi?toriography or the ritualized characterization of Orthodoxy. Neverthele??, [End scalawag 12] the common goal of thi? di?cur?ive univer?e wa? the reorganization of ?ignificant a?pect? of life infra a ?ingle, totalized, exceeding Chri?tian rubric.18 Thi? con?truction of Chri?tianne?? primarily tough the fraud of Chri?tianity a? a religious belief, di?embedded, in ?eth ?chwartz? banter?, from some an some unlike(prenominal)(a) cultural commit? and identifying secerner?.19 ?u?anna elm tree ?how? that late fourth-century Chri?tian? were already committed to the humor of morality? and crimson beneath(a)?tood quite a well the re grassse of opinion among religiou? definition and opposite mode? of identity formation.20 ?he find? evidence for thi? claim a? early a? Julian, the Apo?tate who organise hi? devotion, Helleni?m, in the 360? on the model of Chri?tianity, moreover a? we will ?ee, in that respect i? evidence that goe? back at lea?t a? far a? Eu?ebiu? in the fir?t half of the century.21 Julian in?i?t? that only one who confide? in Helleni?m can at a lower place(a)?tand it and educate it, a? ju?tification for hi? denial of the mighty to teach philo?ophy to Chri?tian teacher?.22 Va?iliki Limberi? empha?ize? how, for all Julian? hatred of Chri?tianity, hi? religio?ity ha? been late ?tructured by the model of Chri?tianity.23 A? Limberi? drift? it: Chri?tian? had never been bar from letter?. Not only wa? thi? an effective semipolitical tool to ?tymie Chri?tian?, it had the re entertain outable effect of inventing a [End Page 1 3] wise organized religious belief and religiou? id! entity for passel in the Roman empire.24 I would ?lightly modify Limberi?? formulation by noting that Julian did not ?o overmuch invent a impudent theology a? participate in the invention of a new-fashioned notion of righteousness a? a affable class and a? a regime of power/k without delayledge. ?he write?: In particular, Julian echoe? Chri?tianity? modu? operandi by dramaing pagan practice? into a formal in?titution that one mu?t join.25 Ma?on ha? written of the Ha?monean extent that the analogue Hellene vim? not undergo a wobble of tran?lation, except ?till mean? Greek with all of it? multiform meaning? in play . . . the analogy break? down if Hellene get-up-and-go? not become a religiou? term a? i? ? incite to do. Why flip the tran?lation of Ioudaio? alone?26 True enough. tho edify for Julian, a half a millenium later in the fourth century (and we will ?ee for ?ome Chri?tian writer? a? well at that time), Helleni?m no longer ha? anything to do with organism Gr eek per ?e save i? indeed the name for a pietism!27 By that time, the countersink tran?lation for Helleni?m in tho?e writer? i? ?omething corresponding pagani?m, spot once once again in tho?e Chri?tian writer?, the correct tran?lation of Ioudai?mo? and Ioudaioi and their Latin equivalent? would be Judai?m and Jew?. The great fourth-century Cappadocian theologizer Gregory Nazianzen conte?ted Julian? edict preci?ely on the?e term?, denying that Helleni?m wa? a devotion: besides I am obliged to ?peak again slightly the news . . . Helleni?m to what push? the word apply, what push? one mean by it? . . . Do you want to establish that Helleni?m mean? a religion, or, and the evidence ?eem? to point that way, muscularity? it mean a heap, and the language invented by thi? nation . . . If Helleni?m i? a religion, ?how u? from which aspire and what prie?t? it ha? received it? feel? . . . Becau?e the fact that the ?ame people u?e the Greek language who al?o profe?? Greek rel igion vim? not mean that the word? belong in that re! spectfore to the religion, and that we therefore nu clean-living number 18 inheringly excluded from u?ing them. Thi? i? not a logical conclu?ion, and vim? not acquiesce with your own logician?. ?imply [End Page 14] becau?e two realitie? encounter each new(prenominal) doe? not mean that they ar confluent, i.e. identical.28 Nazianzen denied the genuineness of Helleni?m a? a religion simply he clearly knew what a religion i?, and Chri?tianity i? not the only member of the genu?. He ha? ?ome ?ort of definition of the object religion in mind here, di?tinct from and in binary ?emiotic oppo?ition to ethno?, which belie? the commonplace that ?uch definition? be an early modern product, or wor?e an artificial product of the modern ?cholar? ?tudy.29 Gregory knew preci?ely what kind? of affirmation, of meaning, mu?t be set with practice in launch for it to qualify a? religion:30 it mu?t cast received it? rule? from ?ome place (a? in from ?ome book?; Gregory ?urely doe?nt mean a geographical place, for that would be play into Julian? hand?) and ?ome prie?t?. The concept of religion i? not dependent, a? i? ?ometime? claimed, on the wisdom a??umption that religion i? ?imply a natural faculty of all pitying assembly?, that all human? reserve religion. temporary hookup Gregory of Nazianzen? definition of religion, i?, of cour?e, quite disparate from the Enlightenment one (a variety oddly homologou? to the variety betwixt Catholici?m and Prote?tanti?m), he neverthele?? clearly ha? a notion of religion a? an idea that can be ab?tracted from any particular manife?tation of it. For Gregory, unalike people? feel assorted religion? (?ome right and ?ome wrong), and ?ome folk? gain none. Whichever way the evidence pointed for Nazianzen, it i? clear, a? Elm demon?trate?, that for Julian, Helleni?m wa? indeed a religion. Gregory afford? a definition of religion a? clear a? that of later comparati?t? (although quite divergent from them). A religion i? ?omething that ha? prie?t?, rite?, rule?, and ?acrif! ice?. It i? ab?olutely clear, moreover, from Gregory? di?cour?e that, for thi? Chri?tian, the emergence of religion a? a di?crete kinsfolk of human experience-religion? di?embedding, in ?chwartz? term?,31 ha? interpreted place fully and finally, a? he explicitly ?eparate? religion from ethnicity/language. A? ?chwartz write?, religion i? not a dependent variable of ethno?; indeed, almo?t the oppo?ite i? the [End Page 15] ca?e.32 adept doe? not practice Chri?tianity becau?e one i? a Chri?tian moreover one i? a Chri?tian becau?e one practice? Chri?tianity (exactly the oppo?ite of the ?ituation for Jew?). It i? ?triking to bank line that of all the name? that early Chri?tian? u?ed to define them?elve?-ethno?, lao?, politea, genu?, [End Page 16] natio-none of them ?ignifie? a religion per ?e.33 It i? sure ?ignificant, then, that by the fourth century other term? appear: thr??keia, theo?ebeia, religio, a? name? for a radical.34 A corollary of thi? i? that language it?elf ?hifted it? function a? identity countersinker. A? Claudine Dauphin ha? implored, by the fifth century lingui?tic identity wa? tied to religiou? affiliation and identity, and not to geographic or genealogical identification.35 Gregory, in the cour?e of inclination that Helleni?m i? not a religion, at the ?ame time expo?e? the condition? that would diversify ?ome entity other than Chri?tianity to lay claim to that name. earlier Julian, other fourth-century Chri?tian writer? had no problem naming Helleni?m a religion, thu?, I expect, providing Julian with the very model he wa? later to turn again?t the Chri?tian?. Eu?ebiu? of Cae? bea, the fir?t church hi?torian and an important theologian in hi? own right,36 could write, I save already ?aid forward in the Preparation[37] how Chri?tianity i? ?omething that i? fractional Helleni?m nor Judai?m, only if which ha? it? own particular characteri?tic religion [ ?????????? ??? ?? ???? ????? ??????????],38 the implication cosmos that so me(prenominal) Helleni?m and Judai?m squander, a? we! ll, their own characteri?tic form? of piety (however, to be ?ure, wrong-headed one?). He al?o write?: Thi? compel? u? to conceive ?ome other ideal of religion [??????????], by which they [the ancient Patriarch?] mu?t have command their live?. Would not thi? be exactly that third form of religion halfway amid Judai?m and Helleni?m, which I have already deduced a? the mo?t [End Page 17] ancient and venerable of all religion?, and which ha? been preached of late to all nation? through our ?aviour . . . The convert from Helleni?m to Chri?tianity doe? not land in Judai?m, nor doe? one who resist? the Jewi?h wor?hip become ip?o facto a Greek.39 hither we find in Eu?ebiu? a clear articulation of Judai?m, Helleni?m, and Chri?tianity a? religion?. There i? ?omething called religion, which take? different form?. Thi? repre?ent? a ?ignificant go up ?hift from the to begin with u?e? of the term religio in antique ?ource?, in which a religio i? an appropriate ?ingle act of wor?hip, no t a conceptual or even practical ?y?tem ?eparate from grow and politic?, and in which there i?, therefore, not ?omething called religion at all, no ?ub?tance that we could di? incubate and look at in it? different form?. The fulle?t expre??ion of thi? conceptual ?hift whitethorn be located in the here?iology of Epiphaniu? (fl. early fifth c.), although hi? terminology i? not solo clear (even, appargonntly, to him). For him, not only Helleni?m and Judai?m but al?o ?cythiani?m and even Barbariani?m are no longer the name? of ethnic entitie?40 but of here?ie?, that i?, religion? other than Orthodox Chri?tianity.41 Although Epiphaniu?? u?e of the term i? confu?ing and perhap? confu?ed,42 apparently what he mean? by here?ie? i? often what other writer? of hi? time call religion?: [Helleni?m originated with Egyptian?, Babylonian? and Phrygian?], and it now confu?ed [men?] way?.43 It i? important to ?ee that Epiphaniu?? comment i? a tran?formation of a ver?e from the Pauline literatu re, a? he him?elf inform? u?.44 In Colo??ian? 3.11 we! find here(predicate) there cannot be Greek and Jew, circumci?ed and uncircumci?ed, barbarian, ?cythian, ?lave, free man, but Chri?t i? all, and in all.45 Thi? i? a lovely business leader of the ?emantic [End Page 18] ?hift. For p?eudo-Paul, the?e de?ignation? are obviou?ly not the name? of religiou? formation? but of variou? ethnic and cultural assorting?,46 wherea? for Epiphaniu? they are the name? of here?ie?, by which he mean? group? divided and con?tituted by religiou? difference? fully di?embedded from ethnicitie?: How, otherwi?e, could the religion called Helleni?m have originated with the Egyptian??47 A?toni?hingly, Epiphaniu?? Helleni?m ?eem? to have nothing to do with the Greek?; it i? Epiphaniu?? name for what other writer? would call pagani?m. Epiphaniu?, not ?urpri?ingly, define? the topic of the Jew? religion a? the ?ubject of their feeling?.48 For an Epiphaniu?, a? for Gregory, a major(ip) course (if not the only one) for dividing human world? into group? i? the ?ubject of their touch?, hence the power/ roll in the hayledge regime of religion. The ?y?tem of identitie? had been solely tran?formed during the period extending from the fir?t to the fifth centurie?. The ?y?temic change re?ulting in religiou? difference a? a modality of identity that began, I would ?ugge?t, with the here?iological score of Chri?tian? ?uch a? Ju?tin Martyr work? it?elf out through the fourth century and i? clo?ely intertwined with the triumph of Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy i? thu? not only a di?cour?e for the production of difference at bottom, but function? a? a kin to make and correspond the border betwixt Chri?tianity and it? proximate other religion?, particularly a Judai?m that it i?, in part, inventing. Along with ?uch a ?emantic development of ?elf-under?tanding of Chri?tiani?mu? (and by privation, Iudai?mu?, Pagani?mu?) a? a belief ?y?tem come? the motivating for an idea of orthodoxy to mark out the border? of who i? in and who out. I am u?ing orthodo xy in the ?en?e referred to by rowan tree William? wh! en he wrote, Orthodoxy i? a way that a religion, ?eparated from the locativity of ethnic or geocultural ?elf-definition a? Chri?tianity wa?, a?k? it?elf: [H]ow, if at all, i? one to identify the centre of [our] religiou? tradition? At what point and why do we ? discriminating ?peaking approximately a religion? 49 A? I have written above, Ma?on demon?trate? that [End Page 19] for Chri?tian writer? of the third century, Ioudai?mo?/Iudai?mu? refer? to a belief ?y?tem (and e?pecially a frozen and dead one). Thi? i? often interpreted by Ma?on in general a? part and parcel of the rhetoric of ?uper?e??ion, of God? abandonment of the Jew?.50 However, in at lea?t one place, he him?elf ha? given u? the clue? toward a much richer history of thi? u?age. To recite briefly: Rather than admitting the definitive ?giant armadillo? of the e?tabli?hed form? and re?ponding defen?ively, they began to abide the hybrid form of Chri?tani?mu? on the other group? to facilitate polemical contra?t (?????? ???). The mo?t important group for Chri?tian ?elf-definition had alway? been the Ioudaioi, and ?o they were the group? mo?t con?picuou?ly reduced to ?uch treatment, which generated a ?tatic and ?y?temic ab?traction called ??????????/Iudai?mu?.51 The production of the new household of religion? doe? not imply that many element? of what would form religion? did not exi?t forward thi? time but rather that the particular aggregation of verbal and other practice? that would be named now a? con?tituting a religion only came into organism a? a di?crete fellowship a? Chri?tianization it?elf.52 Important endorser? to the invention of religion would ?eem to be philo?ophical ?chool?, collegia, my?tery cult?, which when combined with the ideational concept of exclu?ive identity (by which I mean belonging/not belonging) added up to the line of descent? of orthodoxy, solvent? of correct-opinion (orthodoxa) a? being definitive of who? in and who? out of the group. Religion, a? pointed ou t tardily by Deni? Guénon, i? con?tituted a? the d! ifference surrounded by religion?.53 Chri?tianity, in con?tituting it?elf a? a religion, removeed religiou? difference-Judai?m-to be it? Other, the religion that i? fal?e. Thi? development of the notion of orthodoxy (not the content of orthodoxy) had a great relate on the Jew? a? well. Again, a? ?chwartz ha? a?tutely noted, the invention of religion had a direct impact on the Jewi?h culture of Late Antiquity becau?e the Jewi?h communitie? appropriated much from the Chri?tian ?ocietie? just about them.54 I have argued at distance in Border Line? that there wa? an at lea?t early form of ?uch orthodoxy developing among the rabbi? of the late ?econd [End Page 20] and third centurie? in Pale?tine a? well.55 In the finally hegemonic formulation of rabbinic Judai?m in the Babylonian Talmud, however, the rabbi? rejected thi? option, propo?ing in?tead the di?tinct eccle?iological principle: An I?raelite, even if he [?ic] ?in?, tolerate? an I?raelite [one remain? a part of a Jewi?h or I?raelite people whether or not one adhere? to the Torah, ?ub?cribe? to it? major precept?, or affiliate? with the community]. whatever it? original meaning, thi? ?entence wa? under?tood end-to-end cla??ical rabbinic Judai?m a? indicating that one cannot cea?e to be a Jew even via apo?ta?y,56 but remnant? and relic? of Judai?m a? a religion remain dormant (at lea?t) inside the culture a? a whole and can be (and are) pioneer at variou? time? a? well. It i? only owing to thi? hi?torical development that we ?peak, for in?tance, of the non-Jewi?h Jew. Thi? the?i? ?hould not in any way, ?hape, or form be con?trued a? a claim for greater adjustment of diver?ity among Jew? than Chri?tian?.57 Hegemonic Chri?tian di?cour?e thu? produced Judai?m and Pagani?m (?uch a? that of Julian) a? other religion? preci?ely in order to cordon off Chri?tianity in a purification and cry?tallization of it? e??ence a? a bounded entity. Julian cleverly rever?e? thi? procedure and turn? it again?t Chri ?tianity. In at lea?t one reading of Julian? Again?t ! the Galilean?, the point of that work i? to rein?tate a binary oppo?ition amid Greek and Jew, Helleni?m and Judai?m, by in?cribing Chri?tianity a? a hybrid. Eu?ebiu?? claim that the one who move on? Helleni?m doe? not land in Judai?m and the rever?e now con?titute? an argument that Chri?tianity i? a mon?trou? hybrid, a mooncalf: For if any man ?hould wi?h to examine into the truth concerning you, he will find that your impiety i? compounded of the ra?hne?? of the Jew? and the indifference and vulgarity of the heathen?. for from twain ?ide? you have careworn what i? by no mean? their be?t but their inferior teaching, and ?o have do for your?elve? a border of wickedne??.58 Julian set ahead write?: It i? expense small-arm . . . to compare what i? ?aid about the prophesy among the Hellene? and Hebraicalal?; and finally to enquire of [End Page 21] tho?e who are incomplete Hellene? nor Jew?, but belong to the ?ect of the Galilean?.59 Julian, a? dedicated a? any Chri?tian orthodox writer to policing borderline?, flaketerly reproache? the Galilean? for contending that they are I?raelite? and argue? that they are no ?uch thing, neither Jew? nor Greek? but devalue hybrid?.60 Here Julian ?ound? very much exchangeable Jerome when the latter declare? that tho?e who conjecture they are both Jew? and Chri?tian? are neither, or Epiphaniu? when he refer? to the Ebionite? a? nothing. Thi? would make Julian? aim ?tructurally identical to the advise? of the Chri?tian here?iologi?t? who, at about the ?ame time, were rendering Chri?tianity and Judai?m in their orthodox form? the fine term? of a binary oppo?ition with the Judaizing Chri?tian?, the hybrid? who mu?t be excluded from the ?emiotic ?y?tem, being mon?ter?. I ?ugge?t, then, a deeper explanation of Julian? in?i?tence that you cannot mix Helleni?m with Chri?tianity. It i? not only that Helleni?m and Chri?tianity are ?eparate religion? that, by definition, cannot be mixed with each other, but even m ore that Chri?tianity i? alway? already (if you will)! an admixture, a ?yncreti?m. Julian want? to rein?tate the binary of Jew and Greek. He provide?, therefore, some other in?tance of the di?cur?ive form that I am parameter for in the Chri?tian text? of hi? time, a horror of ?uppo?ed hybrid?. To recapitulate, in Julian? very formation of Helleni?m, a? a religiou? difference, he mirror? the effort? of the orthodox churchmen. Thi? i? other in?tanciation of the point make above by Limberi?.61 A? he protect? the border? between Helleni?m and Judai?m by excluding Chri?tianity a? a hybrid, Julian ?eem? unknowingly to ?muggle Chri?tian idea? into hi? very attempt to outlaw Chri?tianity. There i? a new moment in fifth-century Chri?tian here?iological di?cour?e. Where in previou? time? the general move wa? to name Chri?tian dissenter? Jew? (a motif that continue? along?ide the new one),62 only [End Page 22] at thi? time (notably in Epiphaniu? and Jerome) i? di?tingui?hing Judaizing dissenter? from orthodox Jew? central to the Chri?tian di?cur?ive project.63 A? one piece of evidence for thi? claim, I would say an explo?ion of here?iological intere?t in the Jewi?h-Chri?tian here?ie? of the Nazarene? and the Ebionite? at thi? time. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, J. K. L. Gie?eler already accept that the brighte?t moment in the hi?tory of the?e two group? doubtle?? fall? about the year cd A.D., at which time we have the be?t count on? concerning them.64 Given that, in fact, it ?eem? unlikely that the?e ?ect? truly flouri?hed at thi? particular time,65 we have to di? screenland other way? of under?tanding thi? ?triking literary flowering. The Ebionite? and Nazorean?, in my reading, function much a? the fab trick?ter design? of many religion?, in that preci?ely by tran?gre??ing border? that the culture e?tabli?he?, they reify tho?e boundarie?.66 The di?cour?e of the Judaizing heretic? thu? perform? thi? very function of reinforcing the binarie?.67 The purpo?e of Epiphaniu?? di?cour?e on the Ebioni te? and Nazarene? i? to participate in the gallant p! roject of sway of (in thi? ca?e) Pale?tine by identifying and reifying the . . . religion?. Epiphaniu? explicitly indicate? that thi? i? hi? purpo?e by opus of Ebion, the (imaginary) here?iarch crack of the ?ect: But ?ince he i? practically middle(prenominal) between all the ?ect?, he i? nothing. The word? of ?cripture, I wa? almo?t in all evil, in the mid?t of the church and ?ynagogue [Prov 5.14], are fulfilled in him. For he i? ?amaritan, but reject? the name with di?gu?t. And patch profe??ing to be [End Page 23] a Jew, he i? the oppo?ite of Jew?-though he doe? agree with them in part.68 In a exalted moment of midra?hic wit (which one he?itate? to attribute to Epiphaniu? him?elf), the ver?e of sawing machine? i? read to mean that I wa? in all evil, becau?e I wa? in the mid?t (between) the church and the ?ynagogue. Epiphaniu?? declaration that the Ebionite? are nothing, e?pecially when put next to Jerome? famou? declaration that the Nazarene? cerebrate that they are Chri ?tian? and Jew?, but in reality are neither, ?trongly retract? for me the in?i?tence in the modern period that the people of ?outhern Africa have no religion, not becau?e they are not Chri?tian?, but becau?e they are not pagan?.69 ?uddenly it ?eem? important to the?e two writer? to a??ert a difference between Judaizing heretic? and Jew?. The a?cription of exi?tence to the hybrid? a??ume? (and thu? a??ure?) the exi?tence of nonhybrid, vestal religion?. Here?iology i? not only, a? it i? u?ually figured, the in?i?tence on ?ome (or another) right doctrine but on a di?cour?e of the pure a? oppo?ed to the hybrid, a di?cour?e that then posit? the hybrid a? it? oppo?ite term. The di?cour?e of race a? tumble by Homi Bhabha prove? helpful: The exertion? of the official knowledge? of coloniali?m-p?eudo-?cientific, typological, legal-admini?trative, eugenici?t-are pose at the point of their production of meaning and power with the fanta?y that dramatize? the impo??ible de?ire for a pure, undifferentiated origin.70 We need only ?ub?titute he! re?iological for eugenici?t in thi? ?entence to arrive at a major the?i? of thi? article. If, on one level, a? I have tried to expre??, orthodox Judai?m i? produced a? the unhopeful of Chri?tian here?iology, and orthodox Chri?tianity a? the mournful of Jewi?h here?iology, on yet another level, the heretic? and the minim are di?cur?ively (and perhap? literally) the ?ame folk?: they con?titute the impo??ible de?ire of which Bhabha ?peak?. Jerome, Epiphaniu?? younger contemporary, i? the other mo?t prolific writer about Jewi?h-Chri?tian? in antiquity.71 Jacob? read? Jerome? Hebraic knowledge a? an important part of the coloniali?t project of the Theodo?ian age.72 I want to focu? here on only one a?pect of Jerome? [End Page 24] di?cour?e about Jew?, hi? di?cu??ion? of the Jewi?h-Chri?tian?. cumulusel Newman ha? recently argued that Jerome? di?cour?e about the Judaizer? and Nazarene? i? more or le?? con?tructed out of whole cloth.73 It thu? ?harply rai?e? the que?tion of motivation, for, a? hi?torian Marc Bloch note?, [T]o e?tabli?h the fact of forgery i? not enough. It i? further nece??ary to di?cover it? motivation? . . . Above all, a fraud i?, in it? way, a piece of evidence.74 I would ?ugge?t that Jerome, in general a much clearer thinker than Epiphaniu?, move? in the ?ame direction but with greater lucidity. For him, it i? ab?olutely unambiguou? that rabbinic Judai?m i? not a Chri?tian here?y but a ?eparate religion. The Mi?chlinge thu? explicitly mark out the ?pace of ilauthenticity, of no religion: In our own day there exi?t? a ?ect among the Jew? throughout all the ?ynagogue? of the Ea?t, which i? called the ?ect of the Minei, and i? even now chastiseed by the Phari?ee?. The adherent? to thi? ?ect are know commonly a? Nazarene?; they believe in Chri?t the ?on of God, born of the Virgin Mary; and they ?ay that He who ?uffered under Pontiu? Pilate and ro?e again, i? the ?ame a? the one in whom we believe. But while they de?ire to be both Jew? and Chri ?tian?, they are neither the one nor the other.75 T! hi? proclamation of Jerome? come? in the context of hi? di?cu??ion with Augu?tine about Galatian? 2, in which Augu?tine, di?allowing the notion that the apo?tle? di??imulated when they kept Jewi?h practice?, ?ugge?t? that their Jewi?h-Chri?tianity wa? legitimate. Jerome re?pond? vigorou?ly, under?tanding the danger of ?uch notion? to totalizing proud orthodoxy.76 What i? new here i? not, obviou?ly, the condemnation of the Jewi?h-Chri?tian heretic? but that the Chri?tian author condemn? them, in addition, for not being Jew?: He thu? implicitly mark? the exi?tence and legitimacy of a true Jewi?h religion along?ide Chri?tianity, [End Page 25] a? oppo?ed to the fal?itie? of the Mi?chlinge. Thi? move parallel?, then, Epiphaniu?? in?i?tence that the Ebionite? are nothing. Pu?hing Jacob?? reading a bit further, I would ?ugge?t that Jerome? in?i?tence on tran?lating from the Hebrew i? both an in?tance of control of the Jew (Jacob?? point) and al?o the very marking out of the Jew? a? ab?o lute other to Chri?tianity. I think that it i? not going too far to ?ee here a reflection of a ?ocial and political proce?? like that David Chide?ter abide by? in an merely different hi?torical moment, The di?covery of an indigenou? religiou? ?y?tem on ?outhern African landmark? depended upon colonial conque?t and domination. Once contained under colonial control, an indigenou? commonwealth wa? found to have it? own religiou? ?y?tem.77 Following out the logic of thi? ?tatement ?ugge?t? that there may have been a ?imilar nexu? between the containment of the Jew? under the colonial nerve centre of the Chri?tian empire and the di?covery/invention of Judai?m a? a religion. Looked at from the other direction, the a??ertion of the exi?tence of a fully ?eparate-from-Chri?tianity orthodox Judai?m functioned for Chri?tian orthodoxy a? a contract of the Chri?tian? own bounded and long identity and thu? furthered the project of imperial control, a? marked out by Jacob?. The di?cur?ive p roce??e? in the ?ituation of Chri?tian empire are ver! y different from the project? of mutual ?elf-definition that I have el?ewhere explored.78 Jerome? famou? ?tatement ju?t cited above that the Nazorean? are neither Jew? nor Chri?tian?79 i? emblematic of the normative and pre?criptive-not de?criptive-nature of ?uch categorie?, which of cour?e, become de?criptive in?ofar a? the pre?cription i? adhered to, no more or le??. Thi? interpretation add? ?omething to that of Jacob?, who write? that among the aberrant figure? of Chri?tian di?cour?e we often find the Jew, the proximate other u?ed to produce the hierarchical ?pace between the Chri?tian and the non-Chri?tian.80 I am ?ugge?ting that the heretic can al?o be read a? a proximate Other, producing a hierarchical ?pace between the Chri?tian and the Jew. Thi? point i? at lea?t partially anticipated by Jacob? him?elf when he write? that Jew? exi?t a? the paradigmatic to-be-known in the overwhelming project of conceptualizing the all in all of orthodoxy. Thi? come? out mo?t clearly in the [Epiphanian] [End Page 26] invoice? of Jewi?h-Chri?tian here?ie?.81 One way of ?pinning thi? would be to ?ee here?iology a? central to the production of Judai?m a? the pure other of Chri?tian orthodoxy, while the other way of interpreting it would be to ?ee Judai?m a? e??ential to the production of orthodoxy over-again?t here?y. My point i? that both of the?e moment? in an o?cillating analy?i? are equally important and valid. ?een in thi? light, the very notion of Jewi?h Chri?tian? (not by that name, of cour?e but a? Judaizing Chri?tian?) i? all important(p) in the formation of Chri?tianity a? the univer?al and imperial religion of the late Roman empire and, later on, of European Chri?tendom a? well. 3. Jewi?h-Chri?tianity i? a Term of Art of Modern Here?iology I begin thi? ?ection with ?ome reflection? of Matt cocksucker?on-McCabe from hi? programmatic e??ay at the beginning of Jewi?h Chri?tianity Recon?idered: The family ha? generally been con?trued by ?cholar?, and mo?tly unreflectively ?o, a? a ?ubcla?? of Chri?t! ianity. Two critical if typically un?poken a??umption? brace up thi? notion of a Jewi?h Chri?tianity. The fir?t i? that, even if the name it?elf had not yet been coined, a religion that can u?efully be di?tingui?hed from Judai?m a? Chri?tianity wa? in fact in exi?tence immediately in the wake of Je?u? death, if not already at bottom hi? own lifetime. The ?econd i? that tho?e ancient group? who ?eem from our per?pective to ?it on the borderline between Judai?m and Chri?tianity are nonethele?? lulu under?tood a? example? of the latter. ?eriou? que?tion? have been rai?ed regarding both of the?e a??umption? in recent ?cholar?hip.82 Jack?on-McCabe then correctly ?pecifie? that particularly important for the que?tion of Jewi?h Chri?tianity in all thi? ha? been the realization that much of what ha? traditionally been a??ociated with Chri?tianity in particular wa? factually characteri?tic of other fir?t-century Jewi?h movement? a? well.83 I would go further than thi? (and have), argui ng that [End Page 27] everything that ha? traditionally been place a? Chri?tianity in particular exi?ted in ?ome non-Je?u? Jewi?h movement? of the fir?t century and later a? well. I ?ugge?t, therefore, that there i? no nontheological or nonanachroni?tic way at all to di?tingui?h Chri?tianity from Judai?m until in?titution? are in place that make and follow out thi? di?tinction, and even then, we know preciou? little about what the nonelite and nonchattering cla??e? were sentiment or doing. In my work, I have tried to ?how that there i? at lea?t ?ome rea?on to think that, in fact, va?t number? of people around the empire make no ?uch firm di?tinction? at all until more or less late in the ?tory. I want to make clear now that it i? (almo?t) equally impo??ible to ?peak of Judai?m nontheologically or in a nonback?hadowing way either until in?titution? are formed which can enforce thi? di?tinction and then with the ?ame caution?. What doe? thi? advent do to the category of Jewi?h Chri?tianity? Jack?on-McCabe rightly note? that th! ere are ?cholar? who have recently ?ugge?ted abandoning the name Jewi?h Chri?tianity and even Chri?tian Judai?m, ?ub?tituting rather ?uch alternative term? a? a Je?u?-movement or Je?u?-believing Jew?, Chri?t-believer?, or apo?tolic Judai?m, but then cavil?, Whether employing the procedural Chri?tian or not, however, thi? new approach ?uffer? from ?ome of the ?ame ba?ic problem? that have plagued the more traditional formulation?. There i? no more agreement among the?e ?cholar? about the criteria that allow one to di?tingui?h Chri?tian (or Je?u?-believing, etc.) Judai?m from Chri?tianity, or regarding the ?pecific body of data relevant to the category, than there ha? been in the ca?e of Jewi?h Chri?tianity. If, however, we follow the intent of at lea?t ?ome of the?e ?cholar?, me for sure included, thi? objection rather mi??e? the point, which i? preci?ely not to di?tingui?h between the?e and other Chri?tian? but between the?e and other Jew?; the only two categorie?, when divided by thi? criterion, are between Jew? who believed in Je?u? in ?ome ?en?e or another and Jew? who did not. The entire que?tion ha? been ?hifted entirely; it i? no longer a dogmatic que?tion of di?tinction? within Chri?tianity between orthodox and heterodox, or even between different varietie? of orthodoxy a? Cardinal Daniélou would have it, but between different type? of Jew?, pro?elyte?, and theo?eboumenoi, and gerim (re?ident alien?, who were required to keep preci?ely the law? marked out in cause? for gentile henchman? of Je?u?, [End Page 28] a? pointed out by Hill).84 One relevant taxon for ?uch de?cription? i? Je?u?-belief but it i? no longer clear that even thi? i? the mo?t intere?ting or per?picaciou? way of thinking about different Jewi?h group?. The whole enterpri?e i? no longer eccle?iocentric and ?o the category of Jewi?h Chri?tianity i? completely evacuated of meaning. It i? not enough to point out, a? Jack?on-McCabe i? wieldful to do, that different ?cholar? have differ ent under?tanding? of the new terminologie? but rathe! r one mu?t mark that radical ?hift in per?pective from the here?y model. Anything le?? i? to continue to commit the theologically founded anachroni?m of ?eeing Jew? (and thu? Jewi?h Je?u? folk al?o) a? more or le?? Jewi?h in?ofar a? they approach the religion of the rabbi? (which wa? al?o much more heterogeneou? than we had thought). ?een from thi? per?pective, which may indeed be a jaundiced or otherwi?e di?torted one, go along to u?e the term and concept Jewi?h Chri?tianity i? ?imply to reject, explicitly or implicitly, the work of ?cholar? who have rethought genealogie? of Judai?m and Chri?tianity that render the term meaningle?? and to perpetuate-I would argue-eccle?iological and here?iological categorie?, comparatively unque?tioned for centurie? becau?e both Jew? and Chri?tian? were comfortable with the ?ocial di?tinction? they enforced. In other word?, I am ?ugge?ting that while the category of Jewi?h Chri?tianity ha? ?hifted it? meaning along with ?hift? in the under?tanding of the relation of Judai?m to Chri?tianity, a hi?torical under?tanding that obviate? the categorie? of Judai?m and Chri?tianity (for ?ome purpo?e? until the mid-?econd century and for other? until the fourth) will certainly have no u?e whatever for the category of Jewi?h Chri?tianity, implying, a? it doe?, preci?ely what the revi?ioni?t hi?torical account denie?. I am ?ugge?ting that the problem i? not how to define Jewi?h Chri?tianity, but why we ?hould be u?ing ?uch a category at all? What work doe? it do? What work could it po??ibly do, other than to delineate Judai?m from Chri?tianity rhetorically or po??ibly to di?tingui?h between Chri?tian? who in?i?t that they are not Jew? and Chri?tian? who make no ?uch declaration?? The choice of terminology ha? con?equence?. In hi? clear-thinking and praiseworthily paper on the Jeru?alem church, Craig Hill prefer? to continue to u?e the term Jewi?h Chri?tianity over Chri?tian Judai?m, arguing that in part, thi? i? a retroactive?pectiv e theory that take? into account the eventual ?plit ! between the two religion?. [End Page 29] Ju?t a? important, it factor? in the exi?tence of Gentile Chri?tianity, who?e legitimacy wa? formally accepted by the Jeru?alem church. (Gentile Chri?tian? were not con?idered Jew?, ?o Judai?m i? not the overarching category.)85 There ?eem to me here a few undertheorized category a??umption? that are subtle from my point of view, namely, (1) the a??umption that the set up of whatever ?plit there can be imagined between Judai?m and Chri?tianity wa? between two religion? and (2) that there wa? a religion called Judai?m to which tho?e who were not Jew? did not belong. The?e two a??umption? re?ult preci?ely from the retro?pective judgment to which Hill admit? that he i? committed, fit in to which (but again from an admitted Chri?tian per?pective) there end up being two religion?, one called Chri?tianity and one called Judai?m. However, a? I have argued at length (in an argument that I would think need? at lea?t to be refuted before we can go on with bu?ine?? a? u?ual), the privation of an appellation for Chri?tianity before at lea?t the invention of the term in Antioch in the early ?econd century, and even after that in mo?t of the world until much later, i? not a mere gap in the lexicon but an e??ential cultural fact. It i?, moreover, no coincidence that the fir?t u?e? of the term Ioudai?mo? to mean a religiou? phenomenon in any ?en?e of the word al?o ?tem from Antioch and refer to believer? in Je?u? who dont believe rightly, according to Ignatiu?. ?peaking hi?torically, then, Judai?m i? the name of a group of Chri?tian?, anathematized from the very beginning of the name by gentile? arduous to e?tabli?h their legitimacy and the exclu?ive legitimacy of their antidocetic theologie? and anti-Torah-ba?ed practice?. What can Jewi?h Chri?tianity mean? A? intere?ting a? Hill? e??ay i?, hi? a??umption? lead him to the fal?e (from my point of view) a??umption that there i? a ?eparate religion that can be called Chri?tianity e ven before Paul come? on the ?cene, a fortiori afterw! ard.86 A??umption? that lead good ?cholar? to ?uch conclu?ion? need to be examined from the ground up. All thi?, I ?hould empha?ize once again, i? not to challenge the ?cholar?hip of Craig Hill-but to ?ugge?t an entirely different way of bod and thinking about that excellent ?cholar?hip it?elf. Let me put the que?tion differently: raze a??uming for a moment that Hurtado i? right-and Hill follow? him-that wor?hip of a figure like Je?u? i? ab?olutely unique within Judai?m to the group? who wor?hipped Je?u?, on what ground? could we con?ider thi? a new or different ?pecie? of the genu? religion?? The rabbi? introduced innovation? no le?? outstanding vi?-à -vi? earlier I?raelite, [End Page 30] and even Jewi?h (by which I mean belonging to Yehud), religiou? practice? but no one i? tempted to call them a different religion. Even ?uppo?ing that it i? unique, why ?hould wor?hip of Je?u?, con?titute a different religion? And further, why ?hould it con?titute one even prior to the actu al exi?tence of the practice, ?uch that we would know that the practitioner? were entering into the category of Chri?tian? when they embarked on ?uch practice? I? there a Platonic Idea of Chri?tianity hovering ?omewhere in the onto?phere? The volume edited by ?kar?aune and Hvalvik ?tart? out ?eemingly with a much more radical change in per?pective, with it? title, Jewi?h Believer? in Je?u?,87 which would ?eem, at lea?t at fir?t glance, a? an attempt to di?place the category of Jewi?h Chri?tianity. later a fairly elaborate opening ?tatement, in which the editor program? make clear that they are not talking about a category of Chri?tianity but a category of Chri?tian?, that i?, believer? in Je?u? (whatever their Chri?tian practice and belief) who are of Jewi?h ethnic background, they neverthele?? retain the term Jewi?h Chri?tian to mean tho?e of that group who maintain a Jewi?h way of life. But, then, ?omewhat confu?ingly ?kar?aune write?, a? well, we will u?e the adjective Jewi? h Chri?tian a? applying to all categorie? of Jewi?h b! eliever?..88 In any ca?e, whatever the terminology, the empha?i? i? firmly on the ethnicity of the believer? in que?tion and not the form of their Chri?tianity. Thi?, it i? ?ugge?ted and ?upported, i? in line with ancient u?age? a? well. Here the problem? (a? admitted) begin. ?kar?aune a?k? why the category be by ethnicity ?hould be of theological ?ignificance and an?wer? that thi? i? becau?e the ?o-called Jewi?h leader?hip define Chri?tian? who were Jew? a? apo?tate? but not gentile Chri?tian?, and ?een from thi? per?pective, the que?tion of ethnicity wa? a que?tion of the utmo?t theological ?ignificance.89 But there are ?everal problem? with thi? ?tatement: Fir?t of all, thi? would render it a que?tion of Jewi?h theology, not Chri?tian theology, a??uming, of cour?e a? the editor? do, that the?e can be di?tingui?hed at the time. ?econd, there i? no definition of what Jewi?h leader?hip i? being talked about, nor when, nor where: rabbi? in third-century Pale?tine, in ?ixth-century Babylonia, Phari?ee? of the fir?t century, Jame? the Ju?t, Jo?ephu?? Finally, Jewi?h believer?-oh what a theologically loaded term that i? when unqualified and mean? believer? in Chri?t; clearly ordinary Jew? are not believer?-in [End Page 31] Je?u? were not called apo?tate? to the be?t of my knowledge but minim, which mean? ?omething like heretic? or ?ectarian?, i.e., adherent? of a deviant form of Judai?m and not non-Jew?. For the earlier rabbi?, ?o-called gentile Chri?tian? ?eem to be ?imply gentile? (to the extent that they were secure of ?uch a phenomenon at all) and for later Babylonian rabbi?, minim, a? well. Thu?, while I do agree with the point that having Jewi?h ethnicity make a difference in early Chri?tianity, including of the Pauline adjustment (but who know? until when?), it remain? a major methodological dissembling to define the difference it made in term? of the ideological pronouncement? of the leader? of certain group? within both Chri?tian and non-Chri?ti an Judai?m. Inter alia, it involve? the ?ame kind of a! nachroni?tic reification of categorie? that we have ?een above. A? ?kar?aune write?, The bottom line regarding Jewi?h identity, then, i? that people who con?idered them?elve? Jewi?h and were con?idered to be Jewi?h by the Jewi?h community were Jewi?h.90 Thi? pa??age it?elf can be read in two way?: either that Jew? are tho?e who are accept a? ?uch by a Jewi?h community a? ethnic Jew? and thu? ?ubject to apo?ta?y, or, Jew? are tho?e who are recognized by a Jewi?h community a? having remained within the community. The fir?t definition i? le?? problematical than the ?econd for obviou? rea?on?. It ha? the virtue, at lea?t, of le?? obviou?ly importing and impo?ing normative categorie?. However, given that non Chri?tian Jew? rarely (at be?t) called them?elve? Ioudaioi, and that Chri?tian Jew? ?eemed to have u?ed the term for ?omeone other than them?elve?, and that at lea?t ?ome non-Jewi?h Chri?tian? u?ed it to mean irregular Chri?tian? and other? ?imply to mean tho?e people whom were li kely today to call Jew?, were in trouble here too. To hi? credit, ?kar?aune clearly recognize? that normative definition? of vindicated religiou? boundarie? e?tabli?hed by religiou? leader? among Jew? and Chri?tian? by which Jew? cannot be Chri?tian? and Chri?tian? cannot be Jew?, ?hould not be accepted by hi?torical ?cholar?hip.91 At the ?ame time, however, hi? view remain?
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