For contemporary Western readers, it can be easy to miss or misread cultural nuances in the New Testament. To hear the text correctly we must be attuned to its original context. As David de Silva demonstrates, keys to interpretation are found in paying attention to four essential cultural themes: honor and shame, patronage and reciprocity, kinship and family, and purity and pollution.
Through our understanding of honor and shame in the Mediterranean world, we gain new appreciation for how early Christians sustained commitment to a distinctive Christian identity and practice. By examining the protocols of patronage and reciprocity, we grasp more firmly the connections between God’s grace and our response. In exploring kinship and household relations, we grasp more fully the ethos of the early Christian communities as a new family brought together by God. And by investigating the notions of purity and pollution along with their associated practices, we realize how the ancient map of society and the world was revised by the power of the gospel.
This new edition is thoroughly revised and expanded with up-to-date scholarship. A milestone work in the study of New Testament cultural backgrounds, Honor, Patronage, Kinship, and Purity offers a deeper appreciation of the New Testament, the gospel, and Christian discipleship.
Tabella dei contenuti
Preface to the Second Edition
Preface to the First Edition
Abbreviations
Introduction: Cultural Awareness and Reading Scripture
1. Honor and Shame: Connecting Personhood to Group Values
2. Honor and Shame in the New Testament
3. Patronage and Reciprocity: The Social Context of Grace
4. Patronage and Grace in the New Testament
5. Kinship: Living as a Family in the First-Century World
6. Kinship and the ‘Household of God’ in the New Testament
7. Purity and Pollution: Ordering the World Before a Holy God
8. Purity and the New Testament
Conclusion
Resources for Further Study
Name Index
Subject Index
Scripture Index
Ancient Writings Index
Circa l’autore
David A. de Silva (Ph D, Emory University) is Trustees' Distinguished Professor of New Testament and Greek at Ashland Theological Seminary in Ashland, Ohio. He is the author of over twenty-five books including Day of Atonement: A Novel of the Maccabean Revolt; Unholy Allegiances: Heeding Revelation's Warning; The Jewish Teachers of Jesus, James, and Jude; Introducing the Apocrypha: Context, Message and Significance; and Perseverance in Gratitude: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary on the Epistle ‘to the Hebrews.’ He is also an ordained elder in the Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church.