kiana
(Kiana)
#1
PREFACE
This eighth volume in the series, Pauline Studies, is on Paul and pseude-
pigraphy—in general, within the New Testament, and outside the New
Testament. The seven previous volumes are: The Pauline Canon, ed.
Stanley E. Porter (PAST 1; Leiden: brill, 2004), Paul and His Opponents,
ed. Stanley E. Porter (PAST 2; Leiden: brill, 2005), Paul and His Theology, ed.
Stanley E. Porter (PAST 3; Leiden: brill, 2006), Paul’s World, ed. Stanley E.
Porter (PAST 4; Leiden: brill, 2008), Paul: Jew, Greek, and Roman, ed. Stan-
ley E. Porter (PAST 5; Leiden: brill, 2008), Paul and the Ancient Letter Form,
ed. Stanley E. Porter and Sean A. Adams (PAST 6; Leiden: brill, 2010), and
Paul and His Social Relations, ed. Stanley E. Porter and Christopher D.
Land (PAST 7; Leiden: brill, 2012). This series continues to grow, and we
are well into the second set of five volumes in the series of what is, at
least for the time being, scheduled to be ten volumes. We are already in
the discussion stage for a further five volumes (to bring the series total to
fifteen volumes). The number of different contributors to these volumes
also continues to grow, and i would again like to welcome any previous
contributors and invite any new contributors to offer essays to any and
all of the remaining volumes that have now moved into development.
They are listed below. As i have previously done, i would like to express
my thanks to those who have found these volumes helpful. i thank those
who have made use of the first seven volumes (and let me know about it),
those who have given such favourable and encouraging reviews of these
volumes, and those who are continuing to use these volumes to aid in their
own research, writing, and teaching. Like its several predecessors, this vol-
ume brings together a number of different papers by scholars engaged
in discussion of the topic of Paul and the always problematic and con-
tentious issue of pseudepigraphy. One of the noteworthy features of this
volume is that the central notion of Pauline pseudepigraphy has provided
the impetus for essays that reach beyond the New Testament, to such
diverse people and places as Hebrews, the Epistle to the Laodiceans, Sen-
eca, and Nag Hammadi. Of course, the topics one would normally expect
in a volume on Pauline pseudepigraphy are also to be found—although
with some new and different dimensions that promise to test traditional
opinion and move discussion forward. As in the previous volumes, some
of the major questions regarding Paul are raised in this volume, this time