Burton L. Mack is an author and scholar of early Christian history and the New Testament. He is John Wesley Professor emeritus in early Christianity at the Claremont School of Theology in Claremont, California. Mack is primarily a scholar of Christian origins, approaching it from the angle of social group formation. Mack's approach is skeptical, and he sees traditional Christian documents like the Gospels as myth as opposed to history (here, "myth" is not meant to imply "falsehood" or "lie" but to take into account the social, cultural, and political situations of their author). He sees the gospels more as charter documents of the early Christian movement than as reliable accounts of the life of Jesus).
In the field of religious studies more generally, Mack is known for popularizing the term "Social Formation," originally coming from the work of Louis Althusser, as a descriptive category for religion. This stems from his development of a theory of religion as "social interests." Along with his close friend Jonathan Z. Smith, Mack is active in the Redescribing Christian Origins Group of the Society of Biblical Literature.
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“Every man hath a good and a bad angel attending on him in particular all his life long.”
—Robert Burton (15771640)