Leadership Succession in the World of the Pauline Circle
Perry Leon Stepp
Sheffield Phoenix Press Limited, 2006-06-30 - 227 pages
Since
New Testament times, the discussion of leadership succession in the
church has always been polemical. But what the New Testament, especially
in the Pastoral Epistles, means in speaking of succession deserves a
more sober investigation in the light of the literary tradition about
succession in the ancient Mediterranean world. How is succession
actually depicted in Graeco-Roman texts and in Jewish and early
Christian texts of that world? This book undertakes, for the first time,
a thoroughgoing analysis of the evidence, deftly laying out the data
from a wide range of Greek and Roman writers. The question then becomes
how the early readers of the New Testament, conditioned by prior
knowledge of such epistolary and other literary conventions, would have
interpreted Paul's relationship with his delegates like Timothy and
Titus, and how they would have conceived the ministry portrayed in the
Pastorals as passing from a leader to a successor. Stepp's study has
important implications both for our understanding of the ancient
Mediterranean world and for our conceptions of ordination and ministry
in the New Testament.
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