平特五不中

Heidi Wendt

Academic title(s): 

Associate Professor of Religions, Greco-Roman World. A joint appointment with the Department of History and Classical Studies

Heidi Wendt
Contact Information
Address: 

3520 University Street, Room 005
Montreal, Quebec
H3A 2A7, Canada

Phone: 
514-398-5320
Fax number: 
514-398-6665
Email address: 
heidi.wendt [at] mcgill.ca
Degree(s): 

M.T.S. (Harvard), M.A., Ph.D. (Brown)

Biography: 

Dr. Heidi Wendt (Associate Professor)聽 joined the School of Religious Studies as an Assistant Professor of Religions of the Greco-Roman World, a joint appointment with the Department of History and Classical Studies. Previously in 2017, she was an Assistant Professor in New Testament and Christian Origins at Wright State University (Dayton, OH) and a visiting lecturer at Wesleyan University (Middletown, CT). Dr. Wendt completed her PhD in Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean and an MA in Classics at Brown University in 2013, as well as an MTS in New Testament and Christian Origins at Harvard Divinity School in 2007. Her research investigates religious developments of the Roman imperial period, with a focus on situating Jewish and Christian actors and phenomena in their Greco-Roman milieu. She recently published her first monograph,聽At the Temple Gates: The Religion of Freelance Experts in the Roman Empire聽(Oxford: 2016), which聽examines evidence for the rise of self-authorized experts in specialized religious skills, rites, and wisdom under the Roman Empire.

Courses: 
  • RELG 311 Formation of the New Testament 3 Credits
      Offered in the:
    • Fall
    • Winter
    • Summer

  • RELG 411 New Testament Exegesis 3 Credits
      Offered in the:
    • Fall
    • Winter
    • Summer

  • RELG 482 Exegesis of Greek New Testamnt 3 Credits
      Offered in the:
    • Fall
    • Winter
    • Summer

Selected publications: 

At the Temple Gates: The Religion of Freelance Experts in the Roman Empire (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016).

鈥淔rom the Herodians to Hadrian: The Shifting Status of Judean Religion in Post-Flavian Rome.鈥 Forum 6(2017): 139鈥63.

鈥淕alatians 3:1 as an Allusion to Textual Prophecy.鈥 Journal of Biblical Literature 135 (2016): 369鈥89.

Ea Superstitione: Christian Martyrdom and the Religion of Freelance Experts.鈥 Journal of Roman Studies 105 (2015): 183鈥202.

Iudaica Romana: A Rereading of Evidence for Judean Expulsions from Rome.鈥 Journal of Ancient Judaism 6 (2015): 97鈥123.

鈥淓ntrusted with the Oracles of God: The Fate of the Judean Writings in Flavian Rome.鈥 Pages 101鈥09 in A Most Reliable Witness: Essays in Honor of Ross Shepard Kraemer, ed. Shira Lander et al. Brown Judaic Studies 358. Atlanta: SBL Press, 2015.

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