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From a Virgin Womb
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Scholarly researches on the virgin birth have often focussed rather narrowly on the theological and historical difficulties it tends to raise. The Nag Hammadi Apocalypse of Adam, however, provides...
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17 December 2007

Scholarly researches on the virgin birth have often focussed rather narrowly on the theological and historical difficulties it tends to raise. The Nag Hammadi Apocalypse of Adam, however, provides for the first time a glimpse into the wider background of ideas and myths to which it belonged. Prophecies there concerning a universal 'Illuminator' mention his birth 'from a virgin womb'. Several of the stories, drawn from Iranian and other sources , also appear in apocalyptic and testamental literature contemporary with Christian origins. The book centrally analyses a body of extraordinarily detailed narrative parallels between a cluster of stories in the Apocalypse and the infancy narratives of Mt. 1-2, concluding that these stories serve to identify Jesus as the True Prophet who is the fulfilment of history - though not as Son of God. The question of Mt.'s special tradition and its relation to Lk. is also cast in a new light.
Price: $168.00
Pages: 230
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Biblical Interpretation Series
Publication Date:
17 December 2007
ISBN: 9789004163768
Format: Hardcover
readers intrigued by this often misunderstood Nag Hammadi apocryphon will find new and stimulating ideas about its date, origins and teachings that are not found in the traditional introductions.
J.K. Elliott, Expository Times, March 2009
J.K. Elliott, Expository Times, March 2009
Andrew J. Welburn, M.A., Ph.D., Cantab. (1980) has been a Fellow of the Warburg Institute and of New College, Oxford where he was a Lecturer from 1990-2005. He is the author of The Beginnings of Christianity (Edinburgh 2004) and several further books on literary and religious subjects.