Plots of Epiphany: Prison-escape in Acts of the Apostles

Front Cover
Walter de Gruyter, 2004 - Bibles - 335 pages

Past scholarship on the prison-escapes in the Acts of the Apostles has tended to focus on lexical similarities to Euripides' Bacchae, going so far as to argue for direct literary dependence. Moving beyond such explanations, the present study argues that miraculous prison-escape was a central event in a traditional and culturally significant story about the introduction and foundation of cults - a story discernable in the Bacchae and other ancient texts. When the mythic quality and cultural diffusion of the prison-escape narratives are taken into account, the resemblance of Lukan and Dionysian narrative episodes is seen to depend less on specific literary borrowing, and more on shared familiarity with cultural discourses involving the legitimating portrayal of new cults in the ancient world.

 

Contents

PrisonEscape and MythCriticism
1
78
2
Epiphanic Rescue from Prison
29
Beginning from Jerusalem PrisonEscape
93
96
120
The Role of the PrisonEscape in Acts
126
155
205
A Door of Faith Opened to the Gentiles
219
Conclusions
281
Index of Ancient Sources
315
Index of Subjects
329
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

Ph.D. dissertation under the supervision of Prof. Carl Holladay, Emory University. John B. Weaver is now the Reference and Periodicals Librarian at Pitts Theology Library, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.