“Kloppenborg’s combination of a wide range of evidence based on epigraphic, documentary, literary and archaeological data to present a fresh perspective for understanding the New Testament and early Christ assemblies, is both remarkable and worthy of applause. . . . A must-read for New Testament scholars and deserves a permanent spot on reading lists for classes on Paul and the social-historical context of the New Testament.”—C. M. Kreinecker, <i>Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses</i><br /><br />Winner of the 2021 Frank W. Beare Award, sponsored by the Canadian Society of Biblical Studies<br /><br />“This exceptionally important book offers a clearer understanding of who the early Christ followers really were, where they came from, and how their way of life eventually evolved into the preferred ‘religion’ of the Roman Empire.”—Anders Runesson, author of <i>The Origins of the Synagogue</i><br /><br />“John Kloppenborg employs his unmatched knowledge of Greek and Roman associations to construct the first systematic comparison of these small groups with early Christ assemblies. This is a masterpiece of historical research and a model of comparative method.”—Larry L. Welborn, author of <i>The Young Against the Old</i><br /><br />“Why did early Christian groups organize themselves the way they did? What might have attracted people to them? These are questions John Kloppenborg addresses with exemplary clarity and force of argument.”—Arjan Zuiderhoek, author of <i>The Ancient City</i><br /><br />“This data-rich book is a must-read for those interested in the world of earliest Christianity, providing new understandings of social history and of philology. The reader will learn about the rich, the powerful, the citizen and about the immigrant, the artisan, the laborer, the enslaved, and the poor.”—Laura Nasrallah, author of <i>Archaeology and the Letters of Paul</i><br /><br />“A watershed in New Testament scholarship, <i>Christ’s Associations</i> is an exciting interpretation of epigraphic sources, which <i>reframes</i> questions of constant debate. One example is Kloppenborg’s choice to translate <i>membership lists</i> of guilds, rather than focusing on <i>spaces</i> for assemblies.”—David Balch, author of <i>Contested Ethnicities and Images</i><br /><br />