Children's Lives and Deaths in 1 Thessalonians : Impacts on Interpreting Context and Text (The Library of New Testament Studies)

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Children's Lives and Deaths in 1 Thessalonians : Impacts on Interpreting Context and Text (The Library of New Testament Studies)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 272 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780567723666

Full Description

This volume offers new insights into 1 Thessalonians by demonstrating how children and childhood are a key part of its social setting. Around one third of this first-century Macedonian society and community would be under 15 years old: a segment easily ignored by modern scholarship but essential to interpreting the social context and so Paul's letter itself. Based on new research, David E. Bell reveals how Paul transforms common ideas about early death in his response to the Thessalonian community's bereavement, pointing to fresh explanations for his unexpected word choices, metaphors, strategies and structural elements throughout the letter.

Bell introduces the reader to a rich set of contemporary evidence, especially from epitaphs and documentary papyri; drawing on, and adding to, recent scholarship on ancient childhoods. He suggests that while patterns of 'ordinary' experience placed children at the heart of everyday thinking and speaking about death and bereavement; young lives are also seen to be significant for other themes in 1 Thessalonians: sexual exploitation, work and community relationships, collective identity as siblings and an ekklesia. Bell places detailed discussion of the text alongside careful attention to children and childhood even where they are not explicitly mentioned, and ultimately, argues that children's presence is not a side issue in 1 Thessalonians but integral to interpreting the whole.

Contents

Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: Losing and Seeking Children in the Text
2. Death and Grief in Thessalonike: are Children Included? Implications For Reading 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18
3. Reading 1 Thessalonians as a Letter to a Bereaved Community Including Children
4. Interpreting Fornication in the Presence of the Young (1 Thess 4:3-8)
5. Characterising the Community: Brethren, Church and Children
6. Sibling Love and Children: the Domestic Sphere and Work (4:9-12)
7. Conclusion
Bibliography
Appendices