Paul's Critique of Theocracy offers an interpretation of select texts in Corinthians and Galatians concerned with the establishment of legitimate authority in the Christian community. Odell-Scott argues that for Paul, no one may boast that they are selected by God, and no one has the authority to rule as God's representative.


Paul also criticizes those who exhibit a superior "sacredness" over other community members. Contrary to most scholarly views, Odell-Scott argues that Paul is not taking sides in a debate about the proper authority structure. Rather, he criticizes any notion of such a structure, opposing it with his metaphor of the Church as the body of Christ and the "sacred family" of God. The exegesis is also sketched out in a postmodern framework criticizing hierarchy through differentiation.



Autorentext

David Odell-Scott is Professor of Philosophy and Associate Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Kent State University, Ohio, USA.



Inhalt

Chapter 1 Emptying Hierarchy

Part 1 De/Constructing the Church


Chapter 2 De/Credo


Chapter 3 A/Eugeneis


Chapter 4 Christ Crucified and the Emptiness of Theocracy


Part II De/Secration


Chapter 5 Tensions in the Textus, Conflicts in the Corpus


Chapter 6 A Sacred Critique of Reconciliation


Chapter 7 Patriarchal Promise


Chapter 8 De/Secration


Chapter 9 Sacred Deceptions: Sacred Destruction


Chapter 10 An A/Theocratic Conclusion

Titel
Paul's Critique of Theocracy
Untertitel
A/Theocracy in Corinthians and Galatians
EAN
9780567299376
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
01.09.2003
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Anzahl Seiten
200