Simboli Hall 204B
Telephone: 617-552-6519
Email: david.jorgensen@bc.edu
Early Christian history and literature; canonical and noncanonical Gospels; the apostle Paul; processes of scripturalization and canonization of NT texts; the reception and interpretation of biblical and apostolic texts, especially in the 2nd-5th centuries; patristic writers, especially Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, and Tertullian; Marcion; early Christian thinkers, groups, and texts formerly known as Gnostic; the origins, natures, and destinies of orthodoxies and heresies; Unitarian Universalist history.
Dr. David W. Jorgensen is the Assistant Editor of New Testament Abstracts and Assistant Research Professor of New Testament. Prior to coming to 涩里番下载, he taught biblical studies and religions of the ancient Mediterranean at Colby College, the University of Maine at Farmington, the Maine School of Ministry, and Meadville Lombard Theological School, and patristic studies at the Pappas Patristic Summer Institute at Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology. During 2016-17, he was a Junior Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study at Central European University, Budapest.
His doctoral dissertation (Princeton University, 2014) won the 2015 Society of Biblical Literature鈥擠e Gruyter Prize for Biblical Studies and Reception History, and was published in revised form with De Gruyter in 2016 as Treasure Hidden in a Field: Early Christian Reception of the Gospel of Matthew. The book examines second-century Valentinian (a.k.a. 鈥淕nostic鈥) and patristic exegesis of a shared foundational text鈥攖he Gospel of Matthew鈥攁nd finds that certain Valentinian exegetical and theological innovations were influential upon, and ultimately adopted by, 鈥渙rthodox鈥 Christianity, chief among these being the allegorical interpretation of the New Testament. It further argues that the Valentinians are the first to conceptualize the Gospel of Matthew as sacred scripture, and that they play a significant role in the 鈥渟cripturalization鈥 of the Gospels of Matthew and John and the letters of Paul, a process preliminary to their canonization.聽
Prior to his doctoral work, he completed an M.T.S. at Harvard Divinity School with a concentration in New Testament and Christian Origins, and he holds a B.A. in Computer Science from Dartmouth College. He is an active member of the North American Patristics Society, where in recent years he has organized panels on Alternative Christianities (2022), Nag Hammadi and Gnostic Studies (2018) and The Origins of a Christian Scripture (2016).聽 He is also a member of the Society of Biblical Literature.
He enjoys hiking, swimming, birdwatching, and movies, and has large collections of music and boardgames.
Books
Treasure Hidden in a Field: Early Christian Reception of the Gospel of Matthew. Studies of the Bible and Its Reception 6 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2016).
Articles
鈥淰alentininan Influence on Irenaeus: Early Allegorization of the New Testament,鈥 in聽Valentinianism: New Studies,聽eds. C. Markschies and E. Thomassen. Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies 96. (Leiden: Brill, 2019), 400-413.
鈥淎pproaches to Orthodoxy and Heresy in the Study of Early Christianity,鈥 Religion Compass 11:7-8 (2017). .
鈥淣or is One Ambiguity Resolved by Another Ambiguity: Irenaeus of Lyons and the Rhetoric of Interpretation,鈥 in Beyond the Gnostic Gospels: Studies Building on the Work of Elaine Pagels, eds. E. Iricinschi, L. Jenott, N. D. Lewis, and P. Townsend. STAC 82. (T眉bingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2013), 124-147.
鈥淧tolemy (Gnostic),鈥 鈥淗ippolytus of Rome,鈥 and 鈥淣estorius,鈥 in The Routledge Encyclopedia of Ancient Mediterranean Religions, eds. E. Orlin, L. Fried, M. Satlow, and J. Knust (2015).
鈥淥rigen of Alexandria: On First Principles,鈥 in A Documentary History of Unitarian Universalism, ed. D. McKanan (Boston: Skinner Books, 2016).