Philemon: An Introduction and Study Guide: Imagination, Labor and Love
This guide explores and summarizes scholarship on Philemon, acquainting beginning students with what has been said about Philemon, and equipping them to understand the larger debates and conversations that surround it. It explores how different initial scholarly assumptions result in different interpretations and "meanings;" these meanings always have ethical implications. Reading Philemon challenges us to rethink the process of commentary and the communities interpretation creates.

Though only one chapter long, Paul's Letter to Philemon has generated a remarkable amount of commentary and scholarship over the centuries, figuring in debates over textual reconstruction, the formation of biblical canon, the culture of ancient Rome, Greek language and its translation, and the role of the Bible in Western politics and economics. The focus of this short letter is labor, love and captivity. Tradition since Chrysostom has argued the letter is an appeal to Philemon on behalf of a fugitive slave Onesimus, now a convert to Christianity. Yet this interpretation depends upon several assumptions and reconstructions. Other equally plausible contexts could be -- and have been -- argued.
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Philemon: An Introduction and Study Guide: Imagination, Labor and Love
This guide explores and summarizes scholarship on Philemon, acquainting beginning students with what has been said about Philemon, and equipping them to understand the larger debates and conversations that surround it. It explores how different initial scholarly assumptions result in different interpretations and "meanings;" these meanings always have ethical implications. Reading Philemon challenges us to rethink the process of commentary and the communities interpretation creates.

Though only one chapter long, Paul's Letter to Philemon has generated a remarkable amount of commentary and scholarship over the centuries, figuring in debates over textual reconstruction, the formation of biblical canon, the culture of ancient Rome, Greek language and its translation, and the role of the Bible in Western politics and economics. The focus of this short letter is labor, love and captivity. Tradition since Chrysostom has argued the letter is an appeal to Philemon on behalf of a fugitive slave Onesimus, now a convert to Christianity. Yet this interpretation depends upon several assumptions and reconstructions. Other equally plausible contexts could be -- and have been -- argued.
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Philemon: An Introduction and Study Guide: Imagination, Labor and Love

Philemon: An Introduction and Study Guide: Imagination, Labor and Love

by Robert Seesengood
Philemon: An Introduction and Study Guide: Imagination, Labor and Love

Philemon: An Introduction and Study Guide: Imagination, Labor and Love

by Robert Seesengood

eBook

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Overview

This guide explores and summarizes scholarship on Philemon, acquainting beginning students with what has been said about Philemon, and equipping them to understand the larger debates and conversations that surround it. It explores how different initial scholarly assumptions result in different interpretations and "meanings;" these meanings always have ethical implications. Reading Philemon challenges us to rethink the process of commentary and the communities interpretation creates.

Though only one chapter long, Paul's Letter to Philemon has generated a remarkable amount of commentary and scholarship over the centuries, figuring in debates over textual reconstruction, the formation of biblical canon, the culture of ancient Rome, Greek language and its translation, and the role of the Bible in Western politics and economics. The focus of this short letter is labor, love and captivity. Tradition since Chrysostom has argued the letter is an appeal to Philemon on behalf of a fugitive slave Onesimus, now a convert to Christianity. Yet this interpretation depends upon several assumptions and reconstructions. Other equally plausible contexts could be -- and have been -- argued.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780567674975
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 08/10/2017
Series: T&T Clark's Study Guides to the New Testament
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
File size: 687 KB

About the Author

Robert Seesengood is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Albright College, Pennsylvania, USA.
Robert Paul Seesengood is Associate Dean of Academic Affairs at Drew Theological School, Drew University, USA. He is the author of Competing Identities: The Athlete and Gladiator in Early Christianity (2007).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter One: A Quick Overview of Paul's Letter to Philemon
Chapter Two: “I Appeal to You for My Child, Onesimus”
Chapter Three: Rethinking Onesimus and Philemon
Chapter Four: Rethinking Paul: Love, Labor and Affect in Philemon
Conclusion: Letters Lost in the Mail
Bibliography
Index
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