The commentary builds upon, supplements, and expands an already rich repertoire of reflections upon, interpretations of, and interventions in contemporary as well as ancient receptions of Revelation, a book which cannot, does not, and will not let us — our culture, our students, our guild, our imaginations — go.
Read MoreSimilar Things: Reflections On Eusebius The Evangelist
By naming Eusebius as an “evangelist,” however, Coogan asks scholars to take a further step and acknowledge that writing and reading are always already pre-determined by prior commitments and categories.
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