The Challenge of Homer
T.& T.Clark Ltd (Verlag)
978-0-567-69203-0 (ISBN)
This study attempts to trace the discourse on Homer and education among the Christians back to the New Testament. The topic does not come to the surface, but it is argued that in Paul's letters contrasting attitudes towards the propaideutic logic and the philosophical principle of usus (making right use of) are present. He opposed a logic wherein Christian faith represented the peak of education, the culmination of liberal studies. In his instruction on how to relate to the pagan world, Paul argues in accordance with the principle of usus. The New Testament is not so dependent upon the Homeric poems, as assumed by some scholars.
The first Christians faced two hermeneutical challenges of fundamental importnce: that of interpreting the Old Testament and how to cope with the Greek legacy embedded in Homer. The latter is not explicitly raised in the New Testament. But since the art of interpreting any text, presupposes reading skills, conveyed through liberal studies, the Homeric challenge must have been of outmost importance.
Karl Olav Sandnes is Professor in New Testament Studies at MF Norwegian School of Theology (Det teologiske Menighetsfakultet), Oslo. The author of Paul - One of the Prophets? A New Family. Conversion and Ecclesiology in the Early Church with Cross-Cultural Comparisons and Belly and Body in the Pauline Epistles.
Part One: School, Homer and Encyclical Education in Antiquity
1. Introduction and Method
2. School in the Greco-Roman World
3. The Pivotal Role of Homer
4. Knowledge and Formation: The Insuffiency of Encyclical Education
5. Philo of Alexandria: A Hellenistic Jew on Greek Education
Part Two: The Christian Agôn over Encyclical Studies in the first Centuries C.E.
7. Justin Martyr, his student Tatian and Two Ps.Justins
8. The Apostolic Tradition: Prohibited Occupations
9. The Teaching of the Apostles (Didaskalia Apostolorum) and Syriac tradition: "Avoid all the Books of the Gentiles"
10. Tertullian: Learning but not Teaching Encyclical Studies
11. Clement and Origen: Christian Teachers in Alexandria
11.1 Clement of Alexandria: Propaideia Protects Faith
11.2 Origen: The Silver and Gold of the Egyptians
11.3 Origen and Celsos: Christian faith for the Unlearned?
12. Flavius Claudius Julianus - Emperor and Apostate: Christian Teachers are Immoral
13. The Cappadocian Fathers
13.1 Basil of Caesarea/Basil the Great: Ad Adolescentes
13.2 Gregory of Nazianzus' Encomium for Basil
13.3 Gregory of Nyssa's Life of Moses
14. Jerome: An Ascetic Addicted to Greek Learning
15. Augustine: Liberal Studies - A Window on the Relationship between Greek Culture and Christian Faith
16. Summing up part two
Common Ground
Opposition to Encyclical Studies
Encyclical Studies cannot be avoided
Advocates of Encyclical Studies
Arguments Employed in the Debate
The Critics
Advocates
Acting like Bees
All or Nothing?
Part Three: Looking Back to the New Testament
17. The New Testament and Encyclical Studies
17.1 Homer in the New Testament? An Appraisal of Dennis R. MacDonald's "Mimesis Criticism"
17.2 Paul on Encyclical Studies?
18. Drawing the Findings Together
Bibliography and indices
Erscheinungsdatum | 01.03.2019 |
---|---|
Reihe/Serie | The Library of New Testament Studies |
Verlagsort | Edinburgh |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
Gewicht | 476 g |
Themenwelt | Religion / Theologie ► Christentum ► Kirchengeschichte |
ISBN-10 | 0-567-69203-5 / 0567692035 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-567-69203-0 / 9780567692030 |
Zustand | Neuware |
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
aus dem Bereich