Paula Fredriksen

Paula Fredriksen

Author and Aurelio Professor of Scripture, Boston University

Paula Fredriksen is the Aurelio Professor of Scripture at Boston University. The "On Faith" panelist previously held teaching positions at the University of Pittsburgh, University of California -- Berkeley, Stanford and Princeton. She has also taught at Hebrew University in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv University. Fredriksen earned her doctorate in the history of religions (ancient Christianity, Graeco-Roman religions) at Princeton, writing her dissertation on "Augustine's Early Interpretations of Paul." She has published widely on the social and intellectual history of ancient Christianity from the late Second Temple period to the fall of the Roman Empire in the West. Her books include From Jesus to Christ: The Origins of the New Testament Images of Jesus (1988 and 2000), for which she won the 1988 Yale Press Governors' Award for Best Book, and Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews: A Jewish Life and the Emergence of Christianity (1999), for which she won a National Jewish Book Award. Together with Adele Reinhartz, she edited and contributed to Jesus, Judaism, and Christian Anti-Judaism: Reading the New Testament After the Holocaust (2002). She also edited and contributed to On 'The Passion of the Christ' (2005), a collection of essays about Mel Gibson's controversial film. Her latest book, Augustine and the Jews, is set for publication in 2007. Close.

Paula Fredriksen

Author and Aurelio Professor of Scripture, Boston University

Paula Fredriksen is the Aurelio Professor of Scripture at Boston University. The "On Faith" panelist previously held teaching positions at the University of Pittsburgh, University of California -- Berkeley, Stanford and Princeton. She has also taught at Hebrew University in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv University. more »

Main Page | Paula Fredriksen Archives | On Faith Archives


Interfaith Issues Archives



March 11, 2007 11:59 AM

Who Teaches What? That's the Problem

The answer to this question depends, of course, on how we define “religion.”

Continue »




July 5, 2007 8:25 AM

Paganism Not What it Used to Be

Raised and educated on the East Coast, I had just one more reason to be nervous about my first tenure-track job: it was in California. This was added to the pile of all my other worries. I had never before made up my own syllabi; I had never before had to produce six lectures in one week; I had never had to do so much grading before. And on top of all this was my fear of upsetting or offending students who signed up to take my courses in the origins and history of ancient Christianity. Some of the students whom I had worked with in graduate school were Christian fundamentalists. They often had a hard time, I knew, with thinking about the Bible historically. I decided to make my life a little easier. My first lecture would be on the broad cultural context of ancient Christianity. I would lecture on Paganism.

Continue »


Top Local Global

On Faith is an interactive conversation on religion moderated by Newsweek Editor Jon Meacham and Sally Quinn of The Washington Post. It is produced jointly by Newsweek and washingtonpost.com, as is PostGlobal, a conversation on international affairs. Please send your comments, questions and suggestions for On Faith to David Waters, its producer.