Reading Ephesians: Exploring Social Entrepreneurship in the Text
Minna Shkul
Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010-02-10 - 279 pages

Minna
Shkul examines how Ephesians engages in social entrepreneurship - the
deliberate shaping of emerging Christian Identity through provision of
ideological and social paradigms for the fledgling Christian community.
Shkul uses social entrepreneurship as an umbrella for a variety of
social processes reflected in the text. This eclectic theoretical
framework and deutero-Pauline reading position has two key aims. The
first is to offer a theoretically informed social-scientific reading
which demonstrates the extensive socio-ideological shaping within the
text, and displays the writer's negotiation of different group processes
throughout the letter. The second is to examine emerging Christian
identity in the text, testing its ideological and social contours and
its reforms upon Jewish traditions. Crucially this is done without the
theological presupposition that something was wrong with the Judaism
practised at the time, but rather by focusing upon the divine
'legitimating' of the Christian group and its culture.
These
readings of Ephesians examine how the writer engages in a self-enhancing
discourse that reinforces basic components of communality. These
include the construction of a positive in-group identity and the
provision of ideological and social legitimating for the community.
Shkul also discusses the textual reflection of communal relations in
other groups in Greco-Roman antiquity. She examines how Christ-followers
are positioned in a Jewish symbolic universe, which is forced to make
room for Christ and his non-Israelite followers. Finally, she explores
the attitude toward non-Israelites within Ephesians, and their need for
re-socialization.
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