Cynics, Paul, and the Pauline Churches: Cynics and Christian Origins II

Front Cover
Psychology Press, 1998 - Bibles - 369 pages

F. Gerald Downing explores the teachings of Paul, arguing that the development of Paul's preaching and of the Pauline Church owed a great deal to the views of the vagabond Cynic philosophers, critics of the gods and of the ethos of civic society.
F. Gerald Downing examines the New Testament writings of Paul, explaining how he would have been seen, heard, perceived and understood by his culturally and ethnically diverse converts and disciples. He engages in a lucid Pauline commentary and offers some startling and ground-breaking views of Paul and his Word.
Cynics, Paul and the Pauline Churches is a unique and controversial book, particularly in its endorsement of the simple and ascetic life proffered in Paul's teachings in comparison with the greedy, consumerist and self-promoting nature of today's society.

 

Contents

1
1
2
26
Romans the more Stoic tendencies in his thought and
54
3
55
designation of the Mosaic legislation as tyrannously
63
4
85
5
128
6
174
7
204
8
250
9
267
10
287
11
307
ABBREVIATIONS
312
BIBLIOGRAPHY
315
ANCIENT AUTHOR INDEX
338

working one of the more despised crafts this item
191
philosophy in action 72 Our actions teach endurance
198
344
344
Copyright

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About the author (1998)

F. Gerald Downing is Vicar of the parish of St. Simon and St. Jude, Great Lever, Bolton. He is the author of numerous books including Christ and the Cynics (JSOT/SAC 1998) and Cynics and Christian Origins (T & T Clark 1992).