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Paul's teaching about divine benefactions in Rom 12:6-8 extends the
theme of worship that he establishes in Rom 12:1-2. Together, these
passages address a uniquely gentile dilemma that his audience faced
as new Christ-followers, which was the challenge of finding
acceptable replacements for former cultic activities that were
woven through all of life's stages, from birth to death. One of the
chief shortcomings of the scholars that have written about Rom
12:6-8 is a failure to address what his gentile audience might have
brought to his teaching and how his alignment of gifts with ritual
(Rom 12:1-2) mirrored their polytheistic background. By analyzing
examples from ancient texts and artifacts, Teresa Lee McCaskill
shows that all seven of the terms Paul uses in Rom 12:6-8 would
have had recognizable cultic antecedents for first-century
worshipers in Rome. McCaskill presents a theoretical model that
discusses how Paul's gentile audience might have viewed the
charismata and considered them as examples of sanctioned practices
to replace former rituals. She also weighs how these gifts could
have served to further Paul's missional objectives.
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