Paul and Politics: Ekklesia, Israel, Imperium, Interpretation : Essays in Honor of Krister Stendahl

Richard A. Horsley
Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000 -
248 pages
Interpretation
of Paul has long been dominated by Lutheran/Protestant theological
concerns. Paul has been treated as primarily concerned with narrowly
personal religious issues, and critics have often contended that Paul
was a conservative regarding social issues.The contributors to this
volume deal in original and provocative fashion with several
interrelated issues running through Paul's letters and their subsequent
interpretation in Christian history. The essays cover several
interrelated topics concerning Paul and politics: Paul and the politics
of interpretation; Paul and the politics of the Roman Empire; Paul and
the politics of Israel (relations of Jews and Gentiles); Paul and the
politics of the churches (relations of women and men, slaves and free).
Contributors include: Krister Stendahl (Harvard Divinity School);
Elisabeth Sch ssler Fiorenza (Harvard Divinity School); Richard A.
Horsley (University of Massachusetts, Boston); Alan Segal (Barnard
College); Antoinette C. Wire (San Francisco Theological Seminary); N. T.
Wright (Westminster Cathedral); Sheila Briggs (University of Southern
California); Cynthia Briggs Kittredge (Episcopal Theological Seminary of
the Southwest); Pamela Eisenbaum (Iliff School of Theology); Mark Nanos
(Lees Summit, Missouri); Allen Callahan (Harvard Divinity School);
Sze-kar Wan (Andover Newton Theological School); Robert Jewett
(Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary); and Neil Elliott (Seabury
Western).Richard A. Horsley is Professor of Classics and Religion at the
University of Massachusetts, Boston and is the author of numerous books
including Galilee: History, Politics, and People
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