Samuelsson, Gunnar Crucifixion in Antiquity. An Inquiry into the Background and Significance of the New Testament Terminology of Crucifixion |
Gunnar SamuelssonCrucifixion in AntiquityAn Inquiry into the Background and Significance of the New Testament Terminology of CrucifixionGunnar Samuelsson investigates the philological aspects of how ancient Greek, Latin, Hebrew, and Aramaic texts, including the New Testament, depict the practice of punishment by crucifixion. A survey of the ancient text material shows that there has been a too narrow a view of the “crucifixion” terminology. The various terms are not simply used in the sense of “crucify” and “cross,” if by “crucifixion” one means the punishment that Jesus was subjected to according to the main Christian traditions. The terminology is used much more diversely. Almost none of it can be elucidated beyond verbs referring vaguely to some form(s) of suspension, and nouns referring to tools used in such suspension. As a result, most of the crucifixion accounts that scholars cite in the ancient literature have to be rejected, leaving only a few. |










