Artemis, Eve, and the Image of God
Compra a Amazon

Com a afiliat d’Amazon, Lignina obté ingressos de compres que compleixen els requisits aplicables

Artemis, Eve, and the Image of God

A Case of Mistaken Identity in Paul’s Ephesian Marriage Code

What has gone so terribly wrong in Ephesus that Paul feels compelled to write the longest marriage code in the New Testament? 1 Peter only has seven verses about marriage. Colossians only has two. Titus only has two. Why does Ephesians have thirteen? Did Paul wish to set in stone the nature of gender relationships for all of time? Was he trying to ensure the survival of the emerging church amidst harsh Hellenistic realities of hierarchic marriage? Or did he have something else in mind? This is a book about the Ephesians 5 marriage code, the goddess Artemis, Eve, and the image of God in the believer. It explores the adverse influence of Artemis upon the Ephesian believers' thought world, why Paul raises up Eve and Adam as the example of loving marriage (5:31), what Paul thought the image of God looked like in the believer, and why some Ephesian believers thought differently. Dr Brennan argues that the primary purpose behind Ephesians 5:21-33 was to evangelize non-believing Ephesian onlookers to an ideal of marriage in Christ's new kingdom that far surpassed their personal experience in the first-century Roman world, and that Artemis was getting in the way.

Detalls del llibre

Editorial
Pickwick Publications
Any de publicació
2024
Col·lecció
Idioma
Anglès
ISBN
9798385212200
LAN
2a4127a4f926

Formats

ePub PDF