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The Meaning of Ephesians: Competing Christianities in Second-Century Ephesus

Lollar, Jacob A.

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Authors

Profile image of Jacob Lollar

Dr Jacob Lollar jacob.a.lollar@durham.ac.uk
British Academy International Fellow



Abstract

The reception history of Ephesians presents many difficulties fundamentally related to the textual variant in Eph 1:1. The lack of an address to the letter destabilizes the connection that the letter has to the city of Ephesus. The earliest references to the letter in the second century show that the link between the epistle and the city was not obvious. This article offers a proposal for how Ephesians and Ephesus became tied to one another. Ephesian Christians claimed their foundations went back to either Paul or John. The earliest texts (e.g., Acts and the Acts of John) disagree about who evangelized the city first. Ambiguity regarding Ephesus’s conversion continued as late as the fifth century. This article argues that the address to Ephesus was added to an otherwise general letter in the Pauline corpus to legitimize claims that Paul was the first evangelist to the city of Ephesus.

Citation

Lollar, J. A. (2025). The Meaning of Ephesians: Competing Christianities in Second-Century Ephesus. Novum Testamentum: An International Quarterly for New Testament and Related Studies, 67(3), 332-354. https://doi.org/10.1163/15685365-bja10096

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 25, 2025
Online Publication Date May 29, 2025
Publication Date 2025-05
Deposit Date Jun 25, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jun 25, 2025
Journal Novum Testamentum
Print ISSN 0048-1009
Electronic ISSN 1568-5365
Publisher Brill Academic Publishers
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 67
Issue 3
Pages 332-354
DOI https://doi.org/10.1163/15685365-bja10096
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/4122884

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