Difference between revisions of "Spirit and Letter in Paul (1996 Dewey), book"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "'''Spirit and Letter in Paul''' (1996) is a book by Arthur J. Dewey. ==Abstract == "Although the antithesis of spirit and letter has figured prominently in the history of ...")
 
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 5: Line 5:
"Although the antithesis of spirit and letter has figured prominently in the history of interpretation, this is the first critical investigation to place Paul's contribution to this conceptual dialectic within the cultural and political debate of the ancient world. Employing a variety of exegetical lenses, including rhetorical analysis, Dewey explores the historical as well as conceptual drama beginning with Galatians 3. After a detailed excursus which presents the interpretive options for spirit and letter in the ancient world, Dewey moves on to II Corinithians 3 as he uncovers Paul's radical political speech. Finally, in an analysis of Romans 2-3, 7-8, Dewey discloses the communal and cosmic dimensions of Paul's developing thought. The entire investigation is itself a hermeneutical experience, demonstrating that theology is more than a static reproduction, inviting the engaged reader to discover what has been long silenced in the Pauline texts."--Publisher description.
"Although the antithesis of spirit and letter has figured prominently in the history of interpretation, this is the first critical investigation to place Paul's contribution to this conceptual dialectic within the cultural and political debate of the ancient world. Employing a variety of exegetical lenses, including rhetorical analysis, Dewey explores the historical as well as conceptual drama beginning with Galatians 3. After a detailed excursus which presents the interpretive options for spirit and letter in the ancient world, Dewey moves on to II Corinithians 3 as he uncovers Paul's radical political speech. Finally, in an analysis of Romans 2-3, 7-8, Dewey discloses the communal and cosmic dimensions of Paul's developing thought. The entire investigation is itself a hermeneutical experience, demonstrating that theology is more than a static reproduction, inviting the engaged reader to discover what has been long silenced in the Pauline texts."--Publisher description.


==Editions and translations==
==Editions ==


Published in Lewiston, NY: E. Mellen Press, 1996 ([[Studies in the Bible and Early Christianity]], 33).
Published in Lewiston, NY: E. Mellen Press, 1996 ([[Studies in the Bible and Early Christianity]], 33).
Line 17: Line 17:


[[Category:1996| Dewey]]
[[Category:1996| Dewey]]
[[Category:Scholarship|1996 Dewey]]
[[Category:Books|1996 Dewey]]


[[Category: Scholarship|1996 Dewey]]
[[Category:English language--1990s|1996 Dewey]]


[[Category:English language|1996 Dewey]]
[[Category:Pauline Studies--1990s|1996 Dewey]]
[[Category:Made in the 1990s| 1996 Dewey]]
[[Category:Pauline Studies--English|1996 Dewey]]


[[Category:Paul of Tarsus (subject)|1996 Dewey]]
[[Category:Paul's Theology (subject)|1996 Dewey]]
[[Category:Paul of Tarsus--research (subject)|1996 Dewey]]

Latest revision as of 01:52, 7 May 2016

Spirit and Letter in Paul (1996) is a book by Arthur J. Dewey.

Abstract

"Although the antithesis of spirit and letter has figured prominently in the history of interpretation, this is the first critical investigation to place Paul's contribution to this conceptual dialectic within the cultural and political debate of the ancient world. Employing a variety of exegetical lenses, including rhetorical analysis, Dewey explores the historical as well as conceptual drama beginning with Galatians 3. After a detailed excursus which presents the interpretive options for spirit and letter in the ancient world, Dewey moves on to II Corinithians 3 as he uncovers Paul's radical political speech. Finally, in an analysis of Romans 2-3, 7-8, Dewey discloses the communal and cosmic dimensions of Paul's developing thought. The entire investigation is itself a hermeneutical experience, demonstrating that theology is more than a static reproduction, inviting the engaged reader to discover what has been long silenced in the Pauline texts."--Publisher description.

Editions

Published in Lewiston, NY: E. Mellen Press, 1996 (Studies in the Bible and Early Christianity, 33).

Contents

External links

  • [ Google Books]