Honour and conflict in the ancient world 1 Corinthians in its Greco-Roman social setting /

Finney, Mark T.

Honour and conflict in the ancient world 1 Corinthians in its Greco-Roman social setting / [Texte imprimé] : Mark T. Finney - London ; New York : T & T Clark, 2012 - 1 vol. (XVII-288 p.) ; 24 cm - Library of New Testament studies ; 460 . - Library of New Testament studies (T & T Clark, London) .

Based on the author's thesis (Ph.D.)--University of St. Andrews, 2004, entitled: Conflict in Corinth : the appropriateness of honour-shame as the primary social context .

Bibliogr. p. [225]-266

Honour and shame in contemporary Mediterranean ethnography and biblical studies : analysis and critique -- Honour and conflict in the ancient world -- Setting the scene -- Conflict and honour in 1 Corinthians 1-4 -- Social tensions within the community : 1 Corinthians 5-7 -- Honour, conflict and dining : 1 Corinthians 8-11 -- Problems of worship and belief : 1 Corinthians 12-15.

Studies in contemporary social anthropology have noted the importance of male honour and how this is able to generate ideas of social identity within a community and to elucidate patterns of social behaviour. Finney examines the letter of 1 Corinthians, which presents a unique exposé of numerous aspects of social life in the first-century Greco-Roman world where honour was of central importance. At the same time, filotimia (the love and lust for honour) also had the capacity to generate an environment of competition, antagonism, factionalism, and conflict, all of which are clearly evident within the pages of 1 Corinthians. Finney seeks to examine the extent to which the social constraints of filotimia, and its potential for conflict, lay behind the many problems evident within the nascent Christ-movement at Corinth. Finney presents a fresh reading of the letter, and the thesis it proposes is that the honour-conflict model, hitherto overlooked in studies on 1 Corinthians, provides an appropriate and compelling framework within which to view the many disparate aspects of the letter in their social context.

978-0-567-05772-3

298.259