Paul, the Pastoral Epistles, and the Early Church - eBook
Stock No: WW34261EB
Paul, the Pastoral Epistles, and the Early Church - eBook  -     By: James W. Aageson

Paul, the Pastoral Epistles, and the Early Church - eBook

Baker Academic / 2007 / ePub

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Stock No: WW34261EB

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Product Description

Offering an enlightened discussion of what happened to Paul after Paul, Aageson surveys issues, controversies, and arguments surrounding the early church's reinterpretation of the apostle's letters and the reshaping of his theology at a time in history when his memory and legacy served varied and often competing interests. Part of the Library of Pauline Studies which is a very thorough study on Paul, his life, letters, and background. This particular volume takes a closer look not only at the so-called Pastoral Epistles but the legacy that Paul embedded into the duration of the Church.

James W. Aageson is Professor of Biblical Studies and Chair of the Division of Arts and Humanities at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota. He has also written Written Also for Our Sake: Paul and the Art of Biblical Interpretation

Product Information

Title: Paul, the Pastoral Epistles, and the Early Church - eBook
By: James W. Aageson
Format: DRM Protected ePub
Vendor: Baker Academic
Publication Date: 2007
ISBN: 9781441241665
ISBN-13: 9781441241665
Series: Library of Pauline Studies
Stock No: WW34261EB

Publisher's Description

Paul's influence on the history of Christian life and theology is as profound as it is pervasive. A brief survey of almost twenty centuries of Christian thought and practice will confirm the enduring importance of Paul for the life of the church in the Roman and Protestant traditions of the West as well as the Orthodox traditions of the East. Even as Christianity, at the dawn of its third millennium, has become increasingly global and traditions have come to develop and intersect in new and complex ways, Paul's place in the story of Christianity remains deeply rooted in the church's theology, worship, and pastoral life. In both past and present, Paul's influence on the Christian church can hardly be overestimated.

Among the many intriguing issues generated by the historical Paul, his New Testament letters, and early church history is the question, what happened to Paul after Paul? Whether we think in terms of the reception of Paul's theology, or the ongoing legacy of Paul, or early Christian reinterpretation of his letters, the questions persist: what did the early church do with Paul's memory? How did it reshape his theology? And what role did his letters come to play in the life of the church?

The focus of the present discussion is in the early decades and centuries of Christianity, a time when the memory and legacy of Paul came to serve varied and often competing interests in the emerging church. It was a time when Paul's reputation and importance to the church were being reinforced and when his epistles were gaining the authority that would ensure their place in the sacred library of Christianity. It was also the time when the Jesus movement forged itself into Christianity, a process in which Paul played a pivotal role and eventually also became an object of revision and transformation himself. What is virtually indisputable in this process is that Paul, during his lifetime and after, played a critical role in making Christianity what it was to become.

Author Bio

James W. Aageson is professor of religion and chair of the Division of Arts and Humanities at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota. He specializes in the study of early Judaism, Paul, and the history of the early church. He has traveled and studied widely in the countries where Christianity first developed.

Stanley E. Porter is president, dean, and professor of New Testament at McMaster Divinity College, Canada. He has authored numerous volumes, including Idioms of the Greek New Testament and The Book of Romans: A Grammatical-Rhetorical Commentary and is editor of the Library of Pauline Studies.

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