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facts about martin hengel.html

15 Facts About Martin Hengel

facts about martin hengel.html1.

Martin Hengel was a German historian of religion, New Testament scholar, and Lutheran theologian, focusing on the Second Temple period and Hellenistic period of ancient Judaism and early Christianity.

2.

In late 1947, Martin Hengel began his studies in Christian theology at the University of Tubingen, moving to the University of Heidelberg in 1949.

3.

Martin Hengel received honorary doctorates from the universities of Uppsala, St Andrews, Cambridge, Durham, Strasbourg, and Dublin.

4.

Martin Hengel was a corresponding member of the British Academy and the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.

5.

Martin Hengel continued to work on his doctoral thesis in his spare time.

6.

Martin Hengel completed his postgraduate work on his Habilitation thesis, a requirement for academic teaching, at the University of Tubingen in 1967.

7.

Martin Hengel's thesis was concerned with Second Temple Judaism and Hellenism.

8.

Martin Hengel was a professor at the University of Erlangen starting in 1968.

9.

In 1972, Martin Hengel returned to Tubingen to succeed Michel as a professor.

10.

Martin Hengel specialized in the early period of Rabbinic Judaism, including early Christianity and the origins of Christianity.

11.

Martin Hengel's Christology strove to share an accurate illumination of who Jesus was and what he did and sought after as well as the notion that "Christianity emerged completely from within Judaism".

12.

Martin Hengel argues in his writings that despite Paul's controversial rhetoric scholars, along with Jewish and Christian communities, must recognize the historical value of Paul's epistles and Luke's account of Paul's life within the Acts of the Apostles.

13.

Martin Hengel recognizes the importance of this awareness because of the multifaceted insight provided about the Second Temple period and Hellenistic Judaism of the 1st century within these texts.

14.

Martin Hengel considered the traditional account that the Gospel of Mark was written by Peter's interpreter to be essentially credible.

15.

Martin Hengel believed that Luke the Evangelist was the companion of Paul's travels and author of the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles.