Description |
1 online resource (324 pages) |
Series |
Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series ; v. 155 |
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Monograph series (Society for New Testament Studies)
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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Print version record |
SUBJECT |
Bible. Corinthians, 1st -- Criticism, interpretation, etc
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Bible. Corinthians, 1st fast |
Subject |
Rhetoric in the Bible.
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Rhetoric in the Bible
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Genre/Form |
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9781107247857 |
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1107247853 |
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1299749127 |
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9781299749122 |
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