RT Book T1 The figure of Hagar in ancient Judaism and Galatians T2 Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament JF Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament A1 Heinsch, Ryan 1985- LA English PP Tübingen PB Mohr Siebeck YR 2022 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/182298145X AB Ryan Heinsch untersucht Paulus' Darstellung der Hagar in Gal 4,21–31 im Kontext des antiken Judentums.InhaltsübersichtPart One: Introductory Matters Chapter 1: Echoes of Supersessionism and the Figure of Hagar in Galatians 4:21–31Chapter 2: Comparative Methodology and Reading Paul Part Two: The Portrayal of Hagar in Ancient Judaism Chapter 3: The Portrayal of Hagar in the LXX of GenesisChapter 4: The Portrayal of Hagar in the Jewish Literature of the Second Temple Period Part Three: The Portrayal of Hagar in Galatians Chapter 5: Again, and Again, and Again: Framing the Portrayal of Hagar in GalatiansChapter 6: »One Bears Children Away from Mount Sinai”: Examining the Portrayal of Hagar in GalatiansChapter 7: »To Be Sure, Sinai is a Mountain in Arabia”: The Text of Galatians 4:25a AB To date, scholarly study of the allegory of Hagar and Sarah in Galatians 4:21–31 has not paid adequate attention to the way Paul's use of the story – chiefly in relation to the figure of Hagar – can be located within streams of ancient Jewish tradition. In this study, Ryan Heinsch fills this scholarly gap by considering Paul's allegorical portrayal of the figure of Hagar in Galatians 4:21–31 within the context of ancient Judaism. The author argues that Paul stands in continuity with – rather than against – ancient Judaism in that he, like other Jews in antiquity, portrays Hagar and her descendants as non-Jews. As a result, the author demonstrates further that Galatians 4:21–31 is not to be read as a polemic against Jews, Jewish Christ-followers, or the continuing validity of the Jewish law (as is common among interpreters), but rather, that Galatians 4:21–31 is an allegory Paul develops about the experience of gentiles in general and the once pagan Galatian gentiles in particular.Survey of contentsPart One: Introductory Matters Chapter 1: Echoes of Supersessionism and the Figure of Hagar in Galatians 4:21–31Chapter 2: Comparative Methodology and Reading Paul Part Two: The Portrayal of Hagar in Ancient Judaism Chapter 3: The Portrayal of Hagar in the LXX of GenesisChapter 4: The Portrayal of Hagar in the Jewish Literature of the Second Temple Period Part Three: The Portrayal of Hagar in Galatians Chapter 5: Again, and Again, and Again: Framing the Portrayal of Hagar in GalatiansChapter 6: »One Bears Children Away from Mount Sinai”: Examining the Portrayal of Hagar in GalatiansChapter 7: »To Be Sure, Sinai is a Mountain in Arabia”: The Text of Galatians 4:25a CN BS580.H24 SN 978-3-16-161855-0 K1 Hagar : (Biblical figure) K1 Bible : Galatians : Criticism, interpretation, etc K1 Bible : Galatians : Relation to the Old Testament K1 Judaism : Relations : Christianity K1 Christianity and other religions : Judaism K1 Paul K1 New Testament K1 Supersessionism K1 Concepts of the Divine K1 Neues Testament K1 Hochschulschrift DO 10.1628/978-3-16-161855-0