Paul on Marriage and Celibacy: The Hellenistic Background of 1 Corinthians 7
Will Deming
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2004 - 271 pages
Foreword
by Raymond F. Collins Paul is traditionally seen as one of the founders
of Christian sexual asceticism. As early as the second century C.E.
church leaders looked to him as a model for their lives of abstinence.
But is this a correct reading of Paul? What exactly did Paul teach on
the subjects of marriage and celibacy? Will Deming here answers these
questions -- often in provocative new ways.By placing Paul's statements
on marriage and celibacy against the backdrop of ancient Hellenistic
society, Deming constructs a coherent picture of Paul's views. He shows
that the conceptual world in which Paul lived and wrote had
substantially vanished by 100 C.E., and terms like "sin," "body," "sex,"
and "holiness" began to acquire moral implications quite unlike those
Paul knew. Paul conceived of marriage as asocial obligation that had the
potential of distracting Christians fromChrist. For him, celibacy was
the single life, free from such distraction, not a life of saintly
denial. Sex, in turn, was not sinful but natural, and sex within
marriage was both proper and necessary.
No comments:
Post a Comment