Dr. Jeffrey S. Siker has taught at Loyola Marymount University since 1987 in the areas of New Testament, early Jewish/Christian relations, the Bible and Ethics, and the history of biblical interpretation. Dr. Siker has been awarded research grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Catholic Biblical Association, the Wabash Center, and has been a Fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute for Advanced Studies in Jerusalem. Dr. Siker is an active Presbyterian minister. He is married to Judy Siker, herself a biblical scholar and PCUSA minister, and together they have five grown children.
In this volume Siker, professor of NT at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, examines what the NT writings have to say about sin, with attention to the distinctive and diverse voices we find there, attending to both continuities and discontinuities across the writings, while placing them within their larger Jewish and Greco-Roman contexts. * NT WORLD * This book is crisply and lucidly written...The book includes a substantial bibliography, along with indexes of Scripture passages and topics. * Greg Carey, The Catholic Biblical Quarterly *