My apologies for the hiatus. But we're back. Here are a couple of items that have been put in print since then.
My article on the motivations for Encratite prohibitions in early Christianity was published by Journal of Theological Studies in October. The article along with the whole current issue is currently available here. Here's the abstract:
The most prominent accounts of encratism identify it as an early
Christian ascetical sect that refrained from sex, and possibly
also wine and meat. Scholars usually give
protological speculation as the reason for these prohibitions: the
prohibition of
marriage and sex is linked with speculation on the
state of humanity and/or the world from the beginning of creation. This
article questions that assumption, and, through a
close examination of the evidence of early Christian heresiologists,
possible
cultural contexts, and certain apocryphal Acts of
the Apostles, instead argues that encratism was marked by several
motivations,
of which the protological was perhaps one. The
evidence from the ancient heresiologists and apocryphal Acts points to
at least
four potential motivations for encratite
prohibitions: Hellenistic moral philosophy, demonology, social
demarcation, and Pythagorean
ethics.
Also my review of Gordon Campbell's Reading Revelation was published just last month in Modern Believing.