|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
After Paul: The Apostle's Legacy in Early Christianity focuses on
the many ways Pauline thought and tradition were reinterpreted,
reused, reframed, and reconstructed in the first centuries of
Christianity. James W. Aageson contends that it is insufficient
simply to focus on Paul or on his legacy in the Greco-Roman world;
what is needed is a bifocal look at Paul with the reference points
being both how Paul transformed his own thinking and later how Paul
and his thought were transformed by others in the church.To speak
of Paul's legacy implies more than the reception of his texts, his
ideas, or his theology. It also implies more than the
interpretative techniques or the references to Paul by early
post-Paul writers. It refers to the apostle's wider impact,
influence, and sway in the first centuries of the church as well.
The questions he addressed, his impulse toward theological
reflection and argumentation, and his approach to pastoral and
ethical concerns undoubtedly influenced the future course of the
Christ movement. Aageson's investigation takes up the issues of
memory and metamorphosis, conflict and opposition, authority and
control, legacy and empire, the church and the Jews, women and
marriage, Paul in place, and church unity to pinpoint
interrelationships and interactions among important strands in
Paul's thought, persona, and authority as together they interfaced
with the changing culture and social life of early Christianity.
After Paul is not intended to be a history of the first centuries
of Pauline Christianity nor an exhaustive account of everything
that pertains to the early development of Paul's legacy. Rather,
Aageson endeavors to plot connections, identify patterns, and
develop a theoretical context for understanding Paul's legacy in
early Christianity. The picture that emerges is one of continuity
and discontinuity between Paul and Pauline tradition as the
historical Paul became a figure of memory and remembrance, framed
and reframed. This specific investigation offers a fresh entry
point to understanding the larger question of how the Christian
tradition came into its own as a social body and religious movement
that could endure even after Paul.
In this book, James Aageson likens interpretation to a conversation
and uses Paul as a model for illustrating this. In Paul's case,
interpretation is a conversation between Paul and scripture.
Aageson gives four case studies of Paul conversing with scripture:
Paul's use of Abraham texts, his understanding of Israel, his use
of the figure of Adam, and his seeing Christ as a figure by which
all traditions are understood in new ways.
As a Jew, Paul learned the skills of biblical interpretation and
placed them in the service of a christological and ecclesiological
message. For Paul, scriptural texts had integrity and generated a
message for his own time and situation.
|
|