Harold W. Attridge has engaged in the interpretation of two of the most
intriguing literary products of early Christianity, the Gospel according
to John and the Epistle to the Hebrews. His essays explore the literary
and cultural traditions at work in the text and its imaginative rhetoric
aiming to deepen faith in Christ by giving new meaning to his death and
exaltation. His essays on John focus on the literary artistry of the
final version of the gospel, its playful approach to literary genres,
its engaging rhetoric, its delight in visual imagery. He situates that
literary analysis of both works within the context of the history of
religion and culture in the first century, with careful attention to
both Jewish and Greco-Roman worlds. Several essays, focusing on the
phenomena connected with Gnosticism, extend that religio-historical
horizon into the life of the early Church and contribute to the
understanding of the reception of these two early Christian
masterpieces.