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Book Cover
E-book
Author Malcolm, Matthew R

Title Paul and the Rhetoric of Reversal in 1 Corinthians
Published Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013

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Description 1 online resource (324 pages)
Series Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series ; v. 155
Monograph series (Society for New Testament Studies)
Contents Acknowledgements; Formatting, Translation, and Abbreviations; Macro-Structure of 1 Corinthians; Chapters 1-4: divisive boasting over human leaders is set against the present inhabitation of Christ's cross; Chapters 5-14: the cross applied; Chapter 15: Pessimism for the dead is set against the future inhabitation of Christ's resurrection; Chapter 16: Concluding local application: those who labour; Introduction; 1 The Kerygma of Reversal; The concept of reversal as a communicative resource; Reversal as Jewish motif; The condemned boaster and the vindicated sufferer: liturgical figures
Recital and participationPsalms; The condemned boaster and the vindicated sufferer: literary figures; Deutero-Isaiah; Daniel; Wisdom of Solomon; Epistle of Enoch; 2 Maccabees; 3 Maccabees; Judith; Reversal as interpretative motif; A summary of Israels history in Philo: Special Laws 2; A summary of Israels history by Achior: Judith 5; A summary of Israels history by Eleazar: 3 Maccabees 6; A summary of Israels history by Stephen: Acts 7; A summary of Israels history in 2 Peter; A summary of Israels history by Josephus: Jewish War 5
The motif of reversal as an influential cultural conceptualisationReversal and Christological interpretation; The historical Jesus and the motif of reversal; Jesus as the vindicated sufferer in Mark; Earthly rulers and opponents as the condemned boasters in Acts; The imagination of the apostle and the flow of 1 Corinthians; Pauls argumentation; Pauls biography; Pauls other letters; 2 Corinthians; Romans; Philippians; Colossians; 1 Corinthians: from boastful rulers to hopeful sufferers; Chapters 1-4; Chapters 5-14; Chapter 15; Chapter 16; A macro-arrangement of dual reversal
The motif of reversalThe terminology of reversal; The impact of reversal; Reversal in 1 Corinthians; The relation of this macro-arrangement to the rhetorical progression of the letter; Conclusion to Chapter 1; 2 The Unity and Coherence of 1 Corinthians; The unity of 1 Corinthians; Objections to the unity of 1 Corinthians; Lack of unified literary coherence; Evidence of an editor; Redaction reconstructions and historical plausibility; An aggressively singular Pauline corpus; The utilisation of 1 Corinthians by Clement, in 96 CE, in Rome; Conceptions of the unity of 1 Corinthians
Greco-Roman letter formsRhetorical criticism; Oxyrhynchus papyrus 292 (25 CE); Pastoral rhetoric; pragmatic coherence; A unified situation behind 1 Corinthians; Theological unity; Theological unity expressed in patterns from a theological heritage; Listening to the text in expectation of otherness; Exegetical tensions in canonical 1 Corinthians; Attention to multiple levels and models of rhetoric; Pastorally driven macro-rhetoric; Adoption and adaptation of micro-rhetorical techniques; Exegetical tensions, passage by passage; Reports of division in 1:10-14 and 11:18-19
Summary Examines why Paul waits until the end of his letter to the Corinthians before mentioning the important theme of resurrection
Notes The coming of Paul and sending of Timothy in 4:14-21 and 16:8-11
Print version record
SUBJECT Bible. Corinthians, 1st -- Criticism, interpretation, etc
Bible. Corinthians, 1st fast
Subject Rhetoric in the Bible.
Rhetoric in the Bible
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781107247857
1107247853
1299749127
9781299749122