Gifford Rhamie addresses the contentious question, "why cannot the
Ethiopian eunuch in Acts 8:26-40 be conceptualised as a Jew in the
British academy?" Rhamie uses postcolonial studies and theory to examine
the Ethiopian eunuch's ethnoreligious agency, finding two
epistemological lenses: whiteness and 'critical conviviality'. The
former is employed in the function of deconstructing, while the latter
encourages opening one's conceptuality in a multidimensional way,
functioning to reconstruct analyses for agency.
Turning to the early Church Fathers, Rhamie argues that the anti-Jewish
discourse of the time, the Adversus Judaeos trope, functioned
teleologically to shift the Ethiopian eunuch's ethnoreligious agency
from an Afroasiatic Jewish to a Graeco-Gentile ideal. In more recent
years, the racialised imagination of the academy further identifies the
eunuch as a Graeco-Roman Gentile. His being denied a Jewish identity
appears to foreclose an exploration of a dynamic agency that could open
up new opportunities and possibilities of (re-)conceptualising Jewish
history, the Book of Acts, and Christian origins. Rhamie asserts that
'Black lives matter' for Jewishness in the Book of Acts and for
Christian origins.