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The Forgotten Creed Stephen J. Patterson (, Willamette University)

The Forgotten Creed By Stephen J. Patterson (, Willamette University)

The Forgotten Creed by Stephen J. Patterson (, Willamette University)


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Summary

The first Christian creed said nothing about Christ, God, or salvation. Instead it told the followers of Jesus who they were: Children of God. Among them, distinctions of race, class, and gender would count for nothing. The Forgotten Creed is the story of that first, forgotten creed and its remarkable vision of human solidarity.

The Forgotten Creed Summary

The Forgotten Creed: Christianity's Original Struggle against Bigotry, Slavery, and Sexism by Stephen J. Patterson (, Willamette University)

Long before the followers of Jesus declared him to be the Son of God, Jesus taught his followers that they too were the children of God. This ancient creed, now all but forgotten, is recorded still within the folds of a letter of Paul the Apostle. Paul did not create this creed, nor did he fully embrace it, but he quoted it and thus preserved it for a time when it might become important once again. This ancient creed said nothing about God or Christ or salvation. Its claims were about the whole human race: there is no race, there is no class, there is no gender. This is the story of that first, forgotten creed, and the world of its begetting, a world in which foreigners were feared, slaves were human chattel, and men questioned whether women were really human after all. Into this world the followers of Jesus proclaimed: "You are all children of God. There is no Jew or Greek, no slave or free, no male and female, for you are all one." Where did this remarkable statement of human solidarity come from, and what, finally, happened to it? How did Christianity become a Gentile religion that despised Jews, condoned slavery as the will of God, and championed patriarchy? Christian theologians would one day argue about the nature of Christ, the being of God, and the mechanics of salvation. But before this, in the days when Jesus was still fresh in the memory of those who knew him, the argument was a different one: how can human beings overcome the ways by which we divide ourselves one from another? Is solidarity possible beyond race, class, and gender?

The Forgotten Creed Reviews

[A] well-written, tightly focused little book * Vincent L. Wimbush, Institute for Signifying Scriptures, RBL *
The Forgotten Creed [...] is an important achievement in the comparative approach on social aspects (race, class and gender) important to early Christianities. The volume is useful due to Patterson's fascinating way of combining scholarship with the art of storytelling. * Petru Moldovan, Journal of Gnostic Studies *
A valuable resource for those interested in Christian origins and New Testament interpretation... Highly Recommended. * CHOICE *
In The Forgotten Creed Patterson uncovers an egalitarian baptismal confession in earliest Christianity...A benefit of this book is that Christian readers are reminded that baptism points to an equality where there is "no Jew or Greek, no slave or free, no male and female; for you are all one in the Spirit." * Stanley N. Helton, Restoration Quarterly *

About Stephen J. Patterson (, Willamette University)

Stephen J. Patterson is the George H. Atkinson Professor of Religious and Ethical Studies at Willamette University. A historian of religion, Patterson specializes in the origins of Christianity, especially the hidden histories found in books that were not included in the Bible. He has authored and co-authored nine books and more than a hundred essays, articles, and reviews, including most recently The Gospel of Thomas and Christian Origins (2013) and The Lost Way: How Two Forgotten Gospels are Rewriting the Story of Christian Origins (2014).

Table of Contents

Contents Introduction: The Unbelievable Creed Chapter 1: Christianity's Forgotten First Creed Chapter 2: The Oldest Cliche Chapter 3: Children of God Chapter 4: There is No Jew or Greek Chapter 5: There is No Slave or Free Chapter 6: There is No Male and Female Conclusion: You are All One

Additional information

NPB9780190865825
9780190865825
0190865822
The Forgotten Creed: Christianity's Original Struggle against Bigotry, Slavery, and Sexism by Stephen J. Patterson (, Willamette University)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2018-11-29
184
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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