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Women in the Earliest Churches

Ben Witherington, III (Author)

9780521407892, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 30 May 1991

316 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1.8 cm, 0.38 kg

'Commendable for its thoroughness and rejection of ideological '. Religious Studies Review

This book examines the roles and functions that women assumed in the early Christian communities from AD 33 to the Council of Nicaea. It surveys, too, the views about women held by various New Testament authors including Paul and the Evangelists. In a careful and judicious study, Ben Witherington shows that early Christianity was neither unreservedly patriarchal nor adamantly feminist in its view of women and their roles, but rather charted a middle course which combined a reforming of the predominantly patriarchal framework of society with an affirmation of new religious roles for women. Now available in paperback, this is the first book to survey such a large amount of material exegetically, and make use, at the same time, of original languages and texts.

Preface
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. Women in first-century Mediterranean cultures
2. Women and the physical family in the Pauline epistles
3. Women and the family of faith in the Pauline epistles
4. Women and the Third Evangelist
5. Women in the churches of Matthew, Mark, and John
6. Trajectories beyond the New Testament era
Conclusions
Notes
Bibliography.

Subject Areas: Biblical studies & exegesis [HRCG]

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