| Dying Adam with his Multiethnic Family Subjects: Greek language; Oral-formulaic analysis.; Oral tradition; Rhetoric Ancient.; Simile.; Greek language; Oral-formulaic analysis.; Oral tradition.; Rhetoric Ancient.; Simile.; Literary style.; The Greek Life of Adam and Eve addresses the issue that every individual in every generation needs to face: the prospect of pain and sickness leading to death and beyond that the great unknown. But what kind of message does this writing bring to its readers? What kind of 'salvation' does it offer? Is it a Jewish or Christian text? In this first attempt to provide a comprehensive interpretation, Michael Eldridge deploys a panoply of scholarly methods, including lexical analysis, textual criticism, genre criticism, narrative criticism and speech act theory, to establish that the Greek Life has in part a missionary intent and is most likely a Jewish rather than a Christian text. This study will interest all concerned with Early Judaism, especially those grappling with the 'Jewish mission' question. |