
Paul and the Imperial Authorities at Thessalonica and Rome
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Inhalt
- Cover
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Table of Contents
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- 1.1 Modern Scholarship on the 'Paul and Politics' Debate: A Survey of Its Proponents and Critics
- 1.2 Modern Scholarship on the 'Paul and Politics' Debate in Romans and in the Thessalonian Epistles
- 1.3 Modern Scholarship on the Imperial Cult and Its Relevance for the Thessalonian and Roman House Churches
- 1.4 Methodological Issues
- 1.4.1 The Literacy of First-Century Believers and Their Reception of Imperial Propaganda
- 1.4.2 The Issue of 'Hidden Transcripts': Discerning Paul's Political and Pastoral Intent
- 1.4.3 The Imperial Cult as a Cult among Other Cults: Avoiding Monolithic and Undifferentiated Approaches
- 1.4.3.1 New Testament Studies and the Imperial Context: Karl Galinsky's Case for a Nuanced Approach
- 1.4.3.2 New Testament Studies and the Imperial Context: The Issue of Appropriate Methodology
- 1.4.3.3 New Testament Studies and the Imperial Context: The Issue of Ideology
- 1.4.3.4 New Testament Studies and the Imperial Context: The Difference between the Imperial Cult at Rome and in the Greek East
- 1.4.3.5 The Limitations of the Ancient Evidence Regarding the Imperial Cult
- 1.5 The Aim and Structure of the Book
- Chapter 2: Paul and the Imperial Gospel at Thessalonica
- 2.1 Scholarly Debate on the Eschatology of 1 Thessalonians 4:13-5:11
- 2.2 Jewish and Roman Conceptions of Rule in 1 Thessalonians
- 2.2.1 Introduction
- 2.2.2 pa???s?a and ?p?f??e?a
- 2.2.3
- 2.2.4
- 2.2.5 s?t???a and ??p??
- 2.3 Paul's Critique of the Augustan Ideology of Rule and Apotheosis Traditions
- 2.4 Conclusion
- Chapter 3: 'The Ultimate Sinner': Paul and the Anti-Christ in Political Context
- 3.1 Introduction to the Modern Scholarly Debate
- 3.2 Jewish Precedents for the 'Man of Lawlessness' in the Intertestamental Period
- 3.3 Caligula's Attempt to Defile the Jerusalem Temple (AD 40)
- 3.4 Does Paul Speak of Caligula in 2 Thessalonians 2:3-4, 8?
- 3.4.1 Paul and the language of epiphany (2 Thess 2:8)
- 3.4.2 Paul and the language of lawlessness (2 Thess 2:3, 7, 8)
- 3.4.3 Paul and the language of deity (2 Thess 2:4)
- 3.5 Conclusion
- Chapter 4: Imperial Conceptions of Rule and Paul's Reign of Grace
- 4.1 Defining the Roman Sense of Time in Relation to Imperial Rule
- 4.1.1 Saeculum and the Centenary Celebrations at Rome
- 4.1.2 The Advent of the Golden Age of Saturn in the Reigns of Augustus and Nero
- 4.1.3 The amici and clientes of Augustus and the Erection of Monuments and Inscriptions to ??O?
- 4.1.4 Augustus' horologium
- 4.2 Paul, Jewish Eschatology and the Reign of Grace
- 4.3 Roman Conceptions of the Rule of the Caesars
- 4.3.1 Princeps a diis electus
- 4.3.2 The 'Age of Grace' from Augustus to Nero
- 4.3.3 The Ruler as 'Cosmic' Benefactor
- 4.3.4 Providentially Defining Events in the Reigns of the Rulers
- 4.3.5 The Ruler as triumphator: The Roman Ideology of Victory
- 4.3.6 The virtus of the Ruler
- 4.3.7 The Titles of the Ruler and the Language of 'Newness
- 4.4 The Triumph of Christ as Eschatological Ruler in Romans
- 4.4.1 Paul, Messianic Prophecy and the Golden Age
- 4.4.2 Paul, Redemption and the 'Newness' of the Julio-Claudian Dynasty
- 4.4.3 Paul, the Redemption of Creation and the Ruler
- 4.4.4 'More Than Conquerors': The Triumph of God's Love over the Ruling Powers
- 4.4.5 Paul, the Crushing of Satan and the Empire of Rome
- 4.5 Conclusion
- Chapter 5: Paul's 'Dishonoured Benefactor' in Augustan and Neronian Context
- 5.1 Political Factionalism and the Mid-Fifties House Churches of Rome
- 5.2 The Forum of Augustus and Imperial Eschatology at Rome
- 5.3 Anti-Augustan Propaganda and Imperial Ideology at Rome
- 5.4 Ovid and the Rhetoric of Imperial Exile
- 5.5 Paul's Dishonoured Benefactor and the Imperial Gospel in Romans 5:1-11
- 5.5.1 Preliminary Comments
- 5.5.2 Peace, Grace, the Hope of Divine Glory, and Love: The Rhetoric of Paul's Gospel in Its Imperial Context (Rom 5:1-5)
- 5.5.3 The Death of Christ and Imperial Rhetoric (Rom 5:6-9)
- 5.5.4 Divine Reconciliation and Imperial Rhetoric (Rom 5:10-11)
- 5.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 6: Paul and the Roman Ideal of Glory in the Epistle to the Romans
- 6.1 A Scholarly Oversight in the Study of Romans
- 6.2 The Roman Nobiles and the Quest for Ancestral Gloria
- 6.2.1 Defining Gloria
- 6.2.2 Sallust and Cicero on Gloria
- 6.2.2.1 A Survey of Sallust's Understanding of Gloria
- 6.2.2.2 A Survey of Cicero's Understanding of Gloria
- 6.2.3 The Scipionic Elogia and Gloria
- 6.2.4 Funeral Processions and the Commemoration of Ancestral Gloria
- 6.2.5 Roman Boasting Culture: the Duilius Inscription and Plautus
- 6.3 The Concentration of Gloria in the House of the Caesars
- 6.3.1 The Application of Gloria Terminology to the Caesars and the Decline of the Traditional Cursus Honorum
- 6.4 Paul and the Jewish Ideal of Glory
- 6.4.1 Paul's Theological Inheritance: The Jewish Context of Glory and Its Impact on Paul's Thought in Romans
- 6.4.1.1 Glory in the LXX
- 6.4.1.2 Glory in the Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Rabbinic Literature
- 6.4.2 Case Studies of Glory in Jewish Thought
- 6.4.2.1 The Perspective of Philo and Josephus on Glory
- 6.4.2.2 Ben Sira on Ancestral Glory in Sirach 44:1-50:29
- 6.4.2.3 Divine Glory and the Roman Conquest: The Perspective of the Psalms of Solomon
- 6.4.3 What Would Jewish Auditors Have Made of Paul's Ideal of Glory?
- 6.5 Paul and the Roman Ideal of Glory
- 6.5.1 What Would Roman Auditors Have Made of Paul's Idealof Glory?
- 6.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 7: Did Paul Found a New Concept of State?
- 7.1 A Survey of Recent Scholarship on Romans 13:1-7
- 7.2 Greek and Roman Political Theorists on Submission to the Ruler
- 7.2.1 Greek Political Literature on the Ideal Ruler
- 7.2.1.1 The Pythagorean Political Theorists
- 7.2.1.2 Dio Chrysostom on Kingship and Tyranny
- 7.2.1.3 Musonius Rufus on Kingship and Philosophy
- 7.2.1.4 Plutarch on Rulers and the Nature of Statecraft
- 7.2.2 Roman Political Literature on the Ideal Ruler: Seneca's De Clementia
- 7.2.3 Conclusion
- 7.3 Jewish Perspectives on Submission to Gentile Rulers
- 7.4 Setting Romans 13:1-7 in Its Imperial Context
- Chapter 8: Conclusion
- 8.1 The Issue of Appropriate Methodology for Studies of Imperial Ideology and Its Relation to Paul's Epistles
- 8.2 Paul's Gospel and Imperial Thessalonica: Issues of Ideological Conflict in the Greek East
- 8.3 Paul's Gospel and Imperial Rome: Issues of Ideological Conflict in the Latin West
- 8.4 Further Research
- Appendix: Neronian Numismatic Evidence
- Bibliography
- Index of Passages
- Old Testament
- Apocrypha
- Pseudepigrapha
- Rabbinic Literature
- Qumran
- New Testament
- Index of Ancient Non-Literary Sources
- Index of Ancient Literary Sources
- Index of Modern Authors
- Index of Subjects
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