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E-Book, Englisch, Band 187, 343 Seiten

Reihe: Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft

Litwa We Are Being Transformed

Deification in Paul's Soteriology
1. Auflage 2012
ISBN: 978-3-11-028341-9
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark

Deification in Paul's Soteriology

E-Book, Englisch, Band 187, 343 Seiten

Reihe: Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft

ISBN: 978-3-11-028341-9
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark



Can Pauline soteriology be categorized as a form of deification? This book attempts to answer this question by keen attention to the Greco-Roman world. It provides the first full-scale history of research on the topic. It is also the first work to fully treat the basic historical questions relating to deification. Namely, what is deity in the Greco-Roman world? What are the types of deification in the Greco-Roman world? Are there Jewish antecedents to deification? Does Paul consider Christ to be a divine being? If so, according to what logic? How is Pauline deification possible in light of ancient Jewish "monotheism"? How is deification possible with a strong notion of creation? Although a rigorously historical study, no attempt is made to avoid theological issues in their historical context. Deification, it is argued, provides a new historical category of perception with which to deepen our knowledge of the Apostle's religious thought in its own time. This book is intended for an academic audience. The range of topics discussed here should interest a wide-array of scholars in the fields of Hebrew Bible, New Testament, Classics, and Patristics.

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Weitere Infos & Material


1;Abbreviations;15
2;Introduction: The Logic and History of Deification in Pauline Research;17
2.1;Transcendence and Deification in Hellenistic Religion;17
2.2;The “Otherness” of Deification;22
2.3;Paul and Deification;26
2.4;History of Research;29
2.5;Recent Research on Paul and Deification;37
2.6;Results;43
2.7;The Method of this Study;46
2.8;Conclusion: A Working Definition of Deification, and Issues of Clarification;47
3;Part I: The Context of Deification in Paul;51
3.1;Chapter 1: What is a God? Defining Divinity in the Greco-Roman World;53
3.1.1;Introduction;53
3.1.2;Formulating the Right Question;54
3.1.3;Divinity in the Greco-Roman World;57
3.1.4;Immortality;60
3.1.5;Power;62
3.1.6;Power, Divinity, and Kings;63
3.1.7;Ancient Jewish Conceptions of Divinity;66
3.1.8;The Pauline Understanding of Divinity;71
3.1.9;Conclusion;73
3.2;Chapter 2: Survey of Deification: Assimilation to Specific Deities;74
3.2.1;Introduction;74
3.2.2;The Greek Vocabulary of Deification;74
3.2.3;Evaluation;77
3.2.4;Deification in Homer;78
3.2.5;Deification in Hesiod, Pindar, and the Homeric Poets;79
3.2.6;Historical Precursors to Ruler Cult;82
3.2.7;Deification in the Ruler Cult;84
3.2.8;Philip II;84
3.2.9;Demetrius Poliorcetes;87
3.2.10;Ruler Cult in Ptolemaic Egypt;90
3.2.11;Ptolemaic Assimilation to Dionysus;93
3.2.12;Background on Dionysus-Osiris;93
3.2.13;The Beginnings of Roman Ruler Cult: Marc Antony’s Assimilation to Dionysus;97
3.2.14;Conclusion;101
3.3;Chapter 3 : The Jewish Roots of Deification;102
3.3.1;Introduction: Jews and Greeks on the Boundaries Between the Human and the Divine;102
3.3.2;The Biblical Roots of Deification;113
3.3.3;The Meaning of Iconic Similarity;116
3.3.4;The Glorified Moses in Philo;122
3.3.5;Sharing God’s Divine Sovereignty: The Divinity of Israelite Kings;125
3.3.6;Conclusion;131
4;Part II Sharing the Divine Identity;133
4.1;Chapter 4: Divine Corporeality and the Pneumatic Body;135
4.1.1;Introduction;135
4.1.2;The Bodies of the Gods;136
4.1.3;From the Glory Body to the Pneumatic Body;143
4.1.4;The Problem at Corinth;144
4.1.5;The Nature of Paul’s Pneumatic Body;145
4.1.6;Comparison of the Pauline Pneumatic Body with the Stoic Soul;153
4.1.7;Celestial Immortality;156
4.1.8;Celestial Immortality in Jewish Sources;163
4.1.9;Paul and Celestial Immortality;164
4.2;Chapter 5: Divine Corporeality and Deification;168
4.2.1;Introduction;168
4.2.2;Celestial Immortality as Deification;168
4.2.3;The Divinity of the Heavens;170
4.2.4;The Human Pneuma as a Divine Reality;174
4.2.5;Deification in Paul;177
4.2.6;Connaturality;182
4.2.7;Conclusion;185
4.3;Chapter 6: Deification and the Cosmic Rule of the Saints;188
4.3.1;Introduction;188
4.3.2;The Battle of the Gods: Cultural Antecedents;189
4.3.3;Paul’s Myth of Battling Gods;192
4.3.4;The Rule of the Saints in Pre-Christian Judaism;195
4.3.5;Paul and the Promise of Eschatological Lordship;198
4.3.6;Results: The Question of Deification;204
4.3.7;Conclusion;206
4.4;Chapter 7: Paul and Moral Assimilation to God;209
4.4.1;Introduction;209
4.4.2;Platonic Assimilation to God;211
4.4.3;Virtue and Deification;212
4.4.4;The Mode of Deification through Moral Virtue;216
4.4.5;Paul, Virtue, Self-Transcendence, and the Question of Deification;222
4.4.6;Deepening the Comparison;225
4.4.7;Paul and Assimilation to God;228
4.4.8;2 Corinthians 3:18 as Moral Assimilation to God;232
4.4.9;Conclusion;239
5;Part III: Addressing the Challenges: Monotheism and Divine Transcendence;243
5.1;Chapter 8: Monotheism and Divine Multiplicity;245
5.1.1;Problematizing Exclusivist Monotheism;247
5.1.2;Towards a Theory of Ancient Jewish Monotheism;255
5.1.3;The Status of Other Numina;261
5.1.4;Paul and Summodeism;264
5.1.5;The Meaning of God’s Oneness in Ancient Judaism;267
5.1.6;Conclusion;272
5.2;Chapter 9: Creation and the Objection of Absolute Transcendence;274
5.2.1;Introduction;274
5.2.2;Shareable and Unshareable Divinity;278
5.2.3;Mediate Divinity and Participation;279
5.2.4;Non-creating and Created Gods;282
5.2.5;God the Creator;286
5.2.6;The Question of Idolatry;290
5.2.7;Conclusion;290
5.2.8;Excursus: Worship and Divinity;291
6;Conclusion;298
6.1;Limitations and Clarifications;299
6.2;Results;315
7;Bibliography;317
7.1;Primary Sources;317
7.2;Secondary Sources;321
8;Subject Index;342


M. David Litwa, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA.



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