Reconceptualising Conversion: Patronage, Loyalty, and Conversion in the Religions of the Ancient MediterraneanDie Studie nimmt die bisherige Diskussion der Konversion in der Antike neu auf durch eine Verknüpfung von klassischen, epigraphischen und biblischen Quellen mit einer sozialwissenschaftlichen Methodologie. Der Autor hinterfragt dabei die bisher vorausgesetzte psychologische Kontinuität zwischen antiken und modernen Menschen und bietet statt dessen ein Modell, welches an den Denkvoraussetzungen der Antike selbst gebildet wurde. Die griechisch-römischen und mediterranen Religionen und Philosophien - also auch das hellenistische Judentum und das Christentum - orientierten sich an den Modellen von Patronat und Loyalität. Das Verständnis der antiken Konversion muss also hier ansetzen. In diesem Zusammenhang wird auch die "Bekehrung" des Paulus neu gedeutet. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 89
Patronage, Loyalty, and Conversion in the Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean Zeba A. Crook. 2.2 Defining our ... Religion ............ 3.2.2 Philosophy and Persuasive Rhetoric ... 91 93 93 .97 100 101 .104 3.2.3 The Call of the ...
... Religious Experience ( New York : Penguin , 1902 ) . Arthur D. Nock , Conversion : The Old and the New in Religion from Alexander the Great to Augustine of Hippo ( London : Oxford University Press , 1933 ) ; Ramsay MacMullen ...
Patronage, Loyalty, and Conversion in the Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean Zeba A. Crook. that cultures with such different views of the self will frame and understand their social and religious experiences differently . Yet the ...
Patronage, Loyalty, and Conversion in the Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean Zeba A. Crook. patron , and to ... religion was the domain of ancient conversion , and understanding how earliest Christianity fits into this cultural ...
... religion did not exist as a discrete social entity independent of other social entities , but rather was embedded within them . What we have in the ancient Mediterranean is political - religion , kinship- religion , and economic - religion ...
Contents
1 | |
13 | |
15 | |
22 | |
31 | |
49 | |
53 | |
54 | |
36 Conclusion | 148 |
The Rhetoric of Patronage and Benefaction in Pauls Conversion Passages | 151 |
1 1617 15810 | 155 |
1117 | 170 |
4b11 | 179 |
44 Paul and the Patronage of Philosophy | 186 |
45 Conclusion | 192 |
Patronage and Benefaction Loyalty and Conversion | 199 |
Patronage vs Benefaction | 59 |
23 Human Patronage and Benefaction | 67 |
24 Divine Patronage and Benefaction | 76 |
25 Divine Patronage and Benefaction in Hellenistic Judaism | 79 |
26 Conclusion | 88 |
The Rhetoric of Patronage and Benefaction | 91 |
31 The Call of the PatronBenefactor | 93 |
32 Persuasion and Philosophical Conversion | 100 |
33 Prayer Praise and Proselytism | 108 |
34 Patronal Synkrisis | 117 |
35 The Χάρις of the PatronBenefactor | 132 |
51 The Nature of Loyalty | 201 |
52 Loyalty and Patronage and Benefaction | 215 |
53 Loyalty Conversion and Paul | 243 |
54 Conclusion | 250 |
Conclusion | 251 |
Bibliography | 257 |
Index of Primary Sources | 287 |
Index of Names and Subjects | 303 |
Index of Modern Authors | 307 |