Christ and Caesar: The Gospel and the Roman Empire in the Writings of Paul and Luke

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Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, Oct 7, 2008 - Religion - 228 pages
The slogan "Paul and the Empire" is much in vogue in New Testament scholarship today. But did Paul truly formulate his gospel in antithesis to the Roman imperial cult and ideology and seek to subvert the Empire? In Christ and Caesar Seyoon Kim first examines five epistles of Paul exegetically and shows how the dominant anti-imperial interpretation is actually difficult to sustain.Next he examines the Lukan writings (Luke-Acts) to see how Luke talks about the encounters of Paul and other gospel preachers with Roman imperialism. Kim explores why it is that Luke makes no effort to present Christ's redemption as materialized in terms of political liberation. Finally, Kim compares the exaltation Christologies of Luke, Revelation, Paul, and Hebrews and inquires about the hermeneutical possibility of developing a political Christology in our present-day context.
 

Contents

Reading 1 and 2 Thessalonians in Terms of the Imperial Cult
3
AntiImperial Interpretation of Other Pauline Epistles
11
The Problems of the Method
28
Factors That Make an AntiImperial Interpretation Difficult
34
Summary and Conclusion
65
The Gospel Charged as AntiImperial
75
It Is Not a Deliverance
94
It Is a Deliverance
114
The Apostles Campaign against the Kingdom
151
Reasons for Lack of Concern for the Political
161
Summary and Conclusion
191
select bibliography
204
index of scripture and other ancient texts
218
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

Seyoon Kim is professor of New Testament and associate deanfor the Korean D.Min. program at Fuller TheologicalSeminary, Pasadena, California. Among his other books areThe Origin of Paul?s Gospel, ?The Son ofMan? as the Son of God, and Paul and the NewPerspective.

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