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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Jewish and Christian cultic discipline to the middle of the second century

Mignard, James Edwin January 1966 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University / The recent discovery of documents at Qumran has provoked renewed interest in the possibility of Jewish influence on primitive Christianity in several areas. The purpose of this dissertation is to describe historically Jewish and Christian disciplinary procedures, particularly excommunication, in order to determine whether the practice of the church indicates indebtedness to pre-Christian Judaism. Since an important excursus, der Synagogenbann, in the Kommentar zum Neuen Testament aus Talmud und Midrasch by H. Strack and P. Billerbeck is frequently referred to in works on church discipline, a secondary purpose of the dissertation is to examine the methodology and results of the excursus. The investigation covers the Old Testament, the Apocrypha, the Pseudepigrapha, the Manual of Discipline, the Damascus Document, rabbinic literature, the New Testament, and the Apostolic Fathers. The curses alah, arar, qalal, and especially herem, were used (often by intimidation)in the Old Testament to maintain moral and spiritual standards. Since anathema is the usual translation in the Septuagint for berem, its use in its classical setting is examined. In addition to the curse, the threat of immediate punishment or future divine judgment was employed to guard the purity of the worship of Yahweh. In the literature of the Intertestamental period, all traces of punishment have disappeared from the Apocrypha and the Pseudepigrapha, except for the mention of the curse in a few poetic passages. However, an elaborate system of punishment is found in the Qumran literature. Further evidence of the practice of excommunication in this period is revealed in the rabbinic material. In IQS and CD the punishment for sins generally depended on whether the sins were considered to be against an individual or the community as a whole. Mild punishment was reserved for social infractions against one's neighbor, but irrevocable expulsion was the sentence for sins thought to have been prompted by an attitude that was not sympathetic with the ideals of the group. The conclusions of the excursus, der Synagogenbann, must be revised by giving closer attention to the problem of chronology. The synagogue at the time of Jesus knew of only one ban, the niddui. The shammatha, as a disciplinary measure, was an interchangeable term with niddui, but was confined to the Babylonian Jews. Herem probably did not appear as a term for excommunication in the synagogue until the third century. The principal reason for the pronouncing of the niddui was to safeguard the halakhah. The practice of excommunication in the New Testament and the Apostolic Fathers scarcely appears, and the use of the curse as a means of discipline does not occur at all. The first Gospel shows that even though Matthew conceived of the church as a corpus mixtum, judgment was properly a (divine) matter for the future. The mark of a Christian in the church was a readiness to forgive an offending brother. In the crucial Pauline passages excommunication has no prominent place. Paul's use of anathema bore little relationship to church discipline. In the remainder of the New Testament and the Apostolic Fathers a spirit of restraint with regard to excommunication characterized the early Christian movement. Thus, members in good standing were to take note of offenders, rebuke them, pray for them, invite and receive them back if they repented. Despite the conclusion that Judaism and the church exercised considerable restraint in the matter of discipline, one cannot claim with certainty the dependence of the church on known Jewish disciplinary practices.
12

Paul's approach to death in his letters and in early Pauline effective history

Kirk, Alexander N. January 2014 (has links)
This thesis analyzes the Apostle Paul’s approach to his own death. The term “approach” is deliberately vague and is intended to encompass a number of questions: What was Paul’s attitude toward his death? How did he act and what did he say and write in view of it? What hopes did he hold for himself beyond death? These questions are explored through a close reading of three Pauline letters that look forward to Paul’s death and other relevant texts in the first two generations after Paul’s death (A.D. 70–160). Thus, this thesis is a study of Paul’s death in prospect and retrospect. Starting with the latter, the first half of the thesis examines portraits of the departed Paul in Acts 20:17–38; 1 Clem. 5.1–6.1; Ign. Eph. 12.2; Rom. 4.3; Pol. Phil. 9.1–2; and the Martyrdom of Paul. It is argued that these portraits exhibit a complicated network of similarities that may be described using Wittgenstein’s concept of “family resemblances.” Viewed as a part of Paul’s early effective history, these early portraits of Paul offer substantial resources for the interpretation of his letters. The second half of the thesis examines portraits of the departing Paul in 2 Cor 1:8–14; 4:16–5:10; Phil 1:18d–26; 2:16b–18; 3:7–14; and 2 Tim 1:12; 4:6–8, 17–18. The “decision of death” referred to in 2 Cor 1:9 is highlighted as a religious experience and one which goaded Paul to formulate his approach to death. It is argued that his death did not primarily present an existential challenge, but a pastoral one. Although touching upon three areas of recent scholarly interest (Paul’s theology of death and beyond; Paul’s religious experience; and Pauline reception), this thesis sets forth a new research question and fresh interpretations of early Christian and Pauline texts.
13

'As I said to you before' : Paul's witness to formative early Christian instruction

Edsall, Benjamin A. January 2013 (has links)
This study addresses the question of formative early Christian preaching and teaching. Unlike previous approaches, I eschew synthesis across a broad range and focus instead on the earliest extant Christian source: the letters of Paul. My method draws on ancient communication practices, primarily represented in ancient rhetoric, wherein communicators rely on knowledge they presume their interlocutors to possess. Passages are analyzed according to the type of appeal to Paul's initial teaching: (1) explicit reminders of previous teaching, (2) direct appeals to knowledge not explicitly linked to previous teaching, and (3) indirect appeals to knowledge about practices, beliefs, conventions, etc. The reconstruction focuses on 1 Thessalonians, 1 Corinthians and Romans. 1 Thessalonians and 1 Corinthians represent neophyte and well-established Pauline communities, respectively, while Romans is of interest because it represents non-Pauline believers. I proceed with a comparative analysis of 1 Thessalonians and 1 Corinthians. Chapter 4 lays out the rhetorical situation for these letters while chapters 5-7 investigate the three types of appeal respectively, each closing with a comparison of similar material in each letter. Chapter 8 summarizes and concludes this discussion, providing the basis for my subsequent analysis of Romans. Finally, I compare the picture from the Thessalonian and Corinthian communities with Paul's letter to the Romans (chapter 9). Topics he expects his Roman audience to know indicate points of expected congruence between Paul's own teaching and that of others. By contrast, topics that receive significant expansion in Romans suggest perceived potential for conflict. In this dissertation I identify consistent elements of early Christian instruction, ranging from Christology to apocalyptic cosmology, while also noting possible conflict. My approach places the reconstruction of early Christian teaching on firmer methodological footing than previous attempts have done and offers a rhetorically sensitive account of the teaching and how it was used.
14

Language and identity in ancient narratives : the relationship between speech patterns and social context in the Acts of the Apostles, Acts of John, and Acts of Philip

Snyder, Julia Ann January 2013 (has links)
Drawing on insights from sociolinguistics, the thesis investigates the relationship between speech patterns and social context in three ancient Greek narratives: the Acts of the Apostles, Acts of John, and Acts of Philip. The thesis explores how characters’ speech patterns correlate with their Christian status, and with the Christian status of their addressees. The relationship between speech patterns and gentile/Jewish identity is also assessed. Linguistic variables include plural forms of address and third-person references to Jesus and the Christian god. The thesis shows that Christian characters are portrayed as speaking differently amongst themselves than when addressing non-Christian characters. It also demonstrates that parameters of sociolinguistic variation in each text point to differing understandings of Christian identity. It is argued that attention to sociolinguistic relationships highlights the importance of ascetic practices and baptism in the Acts of Philip, the gradual nature of Christian conversion in the Acts of John, and the close relationship between Jewish and Christian identity in the Acts of the Apostles. The thesis also examines characterization and implied audience, and argues that attention to social context is necessary to appreciate the full significance of an author’s choice of words.
15

Temples and traditions in Late Antique Ostia, c. 250-600 C.E.

Boin, Douglas Ryan 13 September 2010 (has links)
This dissertation investigates one subset of the many "signs and symbols" representative of traditional Roman religion at Ostia -- its temples and sanctuaries. It uses this body of evidence to foreground a discussion of social and cultural transformation from the 3rd through 6th c. C.E. This period witnessed the decline of traditional religious practices and the rise of a more prominent Judaism and Christianity. Earlier treatments of this topic, however, have often approached the material by assembling a catalogue of buildings, documenting limited incidences of new construction or repair evidenced throughout the Late Roman town. This project, by contrast, instead of beginning with material dated to the "twilight years" of Roman Ostia, starts with the first records of excavation at Ostia Antica. It is these archaeological reports, some comprehensive, others more impressionistic, which document the eclectic nature of objects, sculpture, and architecture that were frequently found preserved throughout the town. These reports represent a new starting point for reconstructing the appearance of the Late Antique city. Drawing upon this material, each of my four chapters takes one element of the traditional landscape (the Capitolium, the so-called Temple of Hercules, the Sanctuary of Magna Mater, or the cult of Vulcan) and then interweaves one or more facets of Christianity or Judaism in order to reveal, dialectically, the dynamism of urban change. Socially and economically, Ostia itself witnessed significant changes during this time. This dissertation provides new answers to when, why, and how those changes took place. It reveals how ambitious architectural projects of the Late Roman Empire continued to achieve stature by visually engaging with both the presence and prestige of earlier monuments. Uncovering new evidence with which to challenge the concept of a late 4th c. "pagan revival," my research, in particular, suggests that accommodation of the past, not urban conflict, was a dominant social model. Finally, I suggest that a broad view of traditional and Christian festivals, from the 4th c. through 6th, shows how new cults, like those of Aurea or Monica, mother of Augustine, simultaneously preserved and transformed the city's traditions into the Early Middle Ages. / text
16

Raised to Newness of Life: Resurrection and Moral Transformation in Second- and Third-Century Christian Theology

McGlothlin, Thomas January 2015 (has links)
<p>The New Testament contains two important and potentially conflicting understandings of resurrection. One integrates resurrection into salvation, suggesting that it is restricted to the righteous; this view is found most prominently in the Pauline epistles. The other understands resurrection as a prerequisite for eschatological judgment and therefore explicitly extends it to all; this view is found most prominently in the book of Revelation. In the former, moral transformation is part of the process that results in resurrection; in the latter, moral transformation only affects what comes after resurrection, not the event of resurrection itself. The New Testament itself provides no account of how to hold together these understandings of resurrection and moral transformation.</p><p>This dissertation is an investigation of the ways in which second- and third-century Christian authors creatively struggled to bring together these two understandings. I select key authors who are not only important in the history of early Christian discussions of resurrection but who also make extensive use of the Pauline epistles. For each author, I investigate not only how they develop or resist the Pauline connection between resurrection and moral transformation but also how they relate that connection to the doctrine of the resurrection of all to face judgment found in Revelation (if they do at all).</p><p>The results are remarkably diverse. Irenaeus develops the Pauline connection between resurrection and moral transformation through the Spirit of God but fails to account for the resurrection of those who do not receive that Spirit in this life (although affirming that resurrection nonetheless). Tertullian begins from the model that takes resurrection to be fundamentally a prerequisite for judgment and struggles to account for Paul's connections between resurrection and salvation. Two Valentinian texts, the Treatise on the Resurrection and the Gospel of Philip, adopt the Pauline model to the exclusion of the resurrection of the wicked. Origen connects resurrection to moral transformation in yet another way, making it an event that pedagogically reflects the moral transformation of all rational creatures--whether for the better or worse. For Methodius of Olympus, the resurrection of the body produces the moral transformation that is the eradication of the entrenched inclination to sin, but the moral transformation in this life that is the resistance of the promptings of that entrenched inclination produces reward after the resurrection. In each case, strategies for holding together the two views found in the New Testament reveal the fundamental theological commitments underlying the author's overall understanding of resurrection.</p> / Dissertation
17

Necrotic and purulent infections in the ancient and early Christian world

Penner, Heather 19 April 2017 (has links)
This thesis focuses on the startling ways in which a significant number of early Christian hagiographies feature saints with rotting flesh and suppurative wounds. It explores this phenomenon first by considering ancient medical understandings of diseases such as phagedenic ulcers, gangrene, and the production of pus as evidence of humoural imbalances requiring medical intervention. Then it considers reasons why early Christians developed more positive attitudes regarding these conditions. These include associating rotting flesh with superior spiritual fortitude. They also include non-theological reasons for this phenomenon. This thesis hypothesizes that early Christians also enjoyed looking at rotting saints out of a voyeuristic desire to gaze upon otherwise hidden bodies. Furthermore, it argues that Christians enjoyed exposing themselves to feelings of fear and anxiety because of the neurochemical dimensions the experience stimulated. / May 2017
18

The Early Church Reflected in the Gospel According to Matthew

Barnes, Jack L. 01 January 1961 (has links)
There seems to be, among other things, a vivid reflection of church life in the Gospel According to Matthew. It is my purpose to point out the outstanding characteristics of the Gospel of Matthew and in so doing present what appears to me to be a definite portrait of an early church. As the environment seems to become clear in what we read, the church takes form and we can see many interesting aspects of it.
19

[en] THE INFLUENCE OF JEWISH APOCALYPTIC ACCOUNT OF THE TRANSFIGURATION IN MATT 17,1-8 / [pt] A INFLUÊNCIA DA APOCALÍPTICA JUDAICA NO RELATO DA TRANSFIGURAÇÃO EM MT 17,1-8

LEONARDO DOS SANTOS SILVEIRA 17 July 2012 (has links)
[pt] A apocalíptica judaica tem um papel importante no cristianismo primitivo, assim como no judaísmo da diáspora. Quando lemos o relato da transfiguração no evangelho de Mateus e comparamos o mesmo com os do evangelho de Marcos e Lucas, percebemos semelhanças e diferenças. Dentre as diferenças, aquelas apresentadas pelo evangelho de Mateus chamam a atenção pelo realce que dá aos aspectos apocalípticos. Por isso, a presente pesquisa analisa a influência da apocalíptica judaica no relato da transfiguração no evangelho de Mateus. Para tanto, a pesquisa começa abordando as questões centrais da apocalíptica judaica e, também o contexto histórico do evangelho de Mateus, ou seja, sua relação com o ambiente romano e com os Judaísmos do final do primeiro século d.C. Em seguida, a perícope de Mt 17,1-8 é analisada mediante o método histórico-crítico, que dentre as análises do método, destaca como o redator trabalhou a sua fonte, o relato do evangelho de Marcos. Por fim, os aspectos teológicos da perícope estudada são analisados, tendo como princípio a comparação com textos da apocalíptica judaica que possuem alguma correspondência. A correspondência, em cada ponto, é feita observando a seguinte ordem: cronológica, semântica e teológica. Dessa forma, a pesquisa ratifica a idéia que para se entender o relato de Mateus da transfiguração é necessário o conhecimento da apocalíptica judaica. / [en] The Jewish apocalyptic plays an important role in early Christianity, as well as in Judaism of diaspora. When we read the story of the Transfiguration in the Gospel of Matthew and compare the same with the Gospel of Mark and Luke, we see similarities and differences. Among the differences, those presented by the Gospel of Matthew draw attention by highlighting that gives doomsday aspects. Therefore, this research analyzes the influence of Jewish apocalyptic account of the Transfiguration in the Gospel of Matthew. To do this, the search begins by addressing the central issues of Jewish apocalyptic, and also the historical context of the Gospel of Matthew, namely, its relationship with the environment and with the Judaisms from the end of the first century AD the then perícope of Matt 17,1-8 is parsed by method, that of historical-critical analysis of the method, outlines how the writer worked its source, the story of the Gospel of mark. Finally, the theological aspects of pericope studied are analyzed, having as a principle the comparison with texts of Jewish apocalyptic that have some correspondence. The match, at each point, is done by observing the following order: chronological, semantics and theological. This way the search ratifies the idea that in order to understand the story of Matthew of the Transfiguration is required knowledge of Jewish apocalyptic.
20

[en] JOH 8:12A: WITHIN THE SCOPE OF PRIMITIVE CHRISTIANITY FROM THE TERM / [pt] JO 8,12A: NO ÂMBITO DO CRISTIANISMO PRIMITIVO A PARTIR DO TERMO

SANDRELLY DA MATTA MENDONCA 23 January 2004 (has links)
[pt] Jo 8,12a: Uma Exegese Cristológica do Quarto Evangelho no âmbito do Cristianismo Primitivo a partir do termo a luz. A atual dissertação, de natureza bíblico-teológica, teve como objeto os resultados da pesquisa contemporânea acerca da Cristologia Joanina. Em particular, enfocou-se, através do termo Eu sou a luz do mundo , como auto-titulação cristológica própria do Quarto Evangelho, as relações com as tradições de Qumram e do ambiente judaicohelenístico testemunhado na literatura Essênia e dos Setenta. Ao mesmo tempo,buscou-se inserir a compreensão cristológica do ambiente joanino aquele mais amplo, que denominamos Cristianismo Primitivo. / [en] Joh 8:12a: An Christological Exegesis of the Fourth Gospel within the scope of Primitive Christianity from the term Light of the World. The present dissertation, biblical and theological kind, had its results from a contemporary research on Johannine Christology. Tackling, particularly, from the term I am the Light of the World , as christological self-titling suitable for the Fourth Gospel, the relations to the Qumran s traditions and the helenistic s Jewish environment testified in the Essenia and literature of the Seventy. At the same time, there has been an attempt to make the Christological comprehension of the Johannine environment part of a broader one, which we designated a Primitive Chistianity.

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