Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £52.79 GBP
Regular price £57.00 GBP Sale price £52.79 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

Paul, the Corinthians and the Birth of Christian Hermeneutics

This book demonstrates how in the Corinthian letters Paul was fashioning the principles that later exegetes would use to interpret scripture.

Margaret M. Mitchell (Author)

9780521197953, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 28 October 2010

194 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.3 cm, 0.43 kg

'… an important contribution to each of the discourses on which i touches. … One rarely encounters works that encompass so much insight in so few pages, in such well-composed prose …' Review of Biblical Literature

In a series of exchanges with the Corinthians in the mid-50s AD, Paul continually sought to define the meaning of his message, his body and his letters, at times insisting upon a literal understanding, at others urging the reader to move beyond the words to a deeper sense within. Proposing a fresh approach to early Christian exegesis, Margaret M. Mitchell shows how in the Corinthian letters Paul was fashioning the very principles that later authors would use to interpret all scripture. Originally delivered as The Speaker's Lectures in Biblical Studies at Oxford University, this volume recreates the dynamism of the Pauline letters in their immediate historical context and beyond it in their later use by patristic exegetes. An engagingly written, insightful demonstration of the hermeneutical impact of Paul's Corinthian correspondence on early Christian exegetes, it also illustrates a new way to think about the history of reception of biblical texts.

Preface
1. The Corinthian diolkos: passageway to early Christian biblical interpretation
2. The agôn of Pauline interpretation
3. Anthropological hermeneutics between rhetoric and philosophy
4. The mirror and the veil: hermeneutics of occlusion
5. Invisible signs, singular testimonies: the agôn over interpretive criteria
6. Hermeneutical exhaustion and the end(s) of interpretation
Bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: Bibles [HRCF], Religion: general [HRA], Religion & beliefs [HR], Classical history / classical civilisation [HBLA1]

View full details