Cosmology and Self in the Apostle Paul: The Material Spirit

by Troels Engberg-Pedersen

2021-01-09 04:55:26

Cosmology and Self in the Apostle Paul challenges the traditional reading of Paul. Troels Engberg-Pedersen argues that the usual, mainly cognitive and metaphorical, ways of understanding central Pauline concepts, such as ''being in Christ'', ''having... Read more
Cosmology and Self in the Apostle Paul challenges the traditional reading of Paul. Troels Engberg-Pedersen argues that the usual, mainly cognitive and metaphorical, ways of understanding central Pauline concepts, such as ''being in Christ'', ''having God''s pneuma (spirit), Christ''s pneuma, andChrist himself in one'', must be supplemented by a literal understanding that directly reflects Paul''s cosmology.Engberg-Pedersen shows that Paul''s cosmology, not least his understanding of the pneuma, was a materialist, bodily one: the pneuma was a physical element that would at the resurrection act directly on the ordinary human bodies of believers and transform them into ''pneumatic bodies''. This literalunderstanding of the future events is then traced back to the Pauline present as Engberg-Pedersen considers how Paul conceived in bodily terms of a range of central themes like his own conversion, his mission, the believers'' reception of the pneuma in baptism, and the way the apostle took the pneumato inform his own and their ways of life from the beginning to the projected end.In developing this picture of Paul''s world view, an explicitly philosophically oriented form of interpretation (''philosophical exegesis'') is employed, in which the interpreter applies categories of interpretation that make sense philosophically, whether in an ancient or a modern context. For thisenterprise Engberg-Pedersen draws in particular on ancient Stoic materialist and monistic physics and cosmology - as opposed to the Platonic, immaterialist and dualistic categories that underlie traditional readings of Paul - and on modern ideas on ''religious experience'', ''self'', ''body'' and''practice'' derived from Foucault and Bourdieu. In this way Paul is shown to have spelled out philosophically his Jewish, ''apocalyptic'' world view, which remains a central feature of his thought.The book states the cosmological case for the author''s earlier ''ethical'' reading of Paul in his prize-winning book, Paul and the Stoics (2000). Less

Book Details

File size9.21 X 6.14 X 0.1 in
Print pages304
PublisherOxford University Press
Publication date April 18, 2010
LanguageEnglish
ISBN9780199558568
Troels Engberg-Pedersen is Professor of New Testament exegesis at University of Copenhagen.His publications include Cosmology and Self in the Apostle Paul: The Material Spirit (Oxford University Press...

Compare Prices

Store Availability Book Format Condition Price
Indigo Books & Music In Stock Hard Cover Hard Cover Buy CAD 264.00
Indigo Books & MusicIn Stock
Format
Hard Cover
Condition
Hard Cover
Buy CAD 264.00
Available Discount
No Discount available

Join us and get access to all
your favourite books

Sign up for free and start exploring thousands of eBooks today.

Sign up for free