دانلود کتاب Civilized Piety: The Rhetoric of Pietas in the Pastoral Epistles and the Roman Empire
by T. Christopher Hoklotubbe
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عنوان فارسی: متمدن تقوا: حرف از Pietas در معنوی رسائل و امپراتوری روم |
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جزییات کتاب
Christopher Hoklotubbe investigates how the author of the Pastoral Epistles (1, 2 Timothy and Titus) strategically appealed to the Greek and Roman virtues of piety (eusebeia, pietas) to ease these external and internal sociocultural threats. The Pastoral Epistles' rhetoric of piety―a term not found in the genuine Pauline epistles―becomes pointed when read alongside ancient discourses on piety from Roman imperial propaganda, civic benefaction/patronage, and moral philosophy. As Hoklotubbe demonstrates, piety was rhetorically potent in the efforts of the Pastoral Epistles to present the fledgling Christian communities in a compelling cultural light, as well as efforts to unite communities around a socially conservative vision of the household of God.
Civilized Piety reveals the value of pietas within an ideological marketplace of emperors, benefactors, and philosophers, all of whom contend with one another to monopolize cultural prestige. The Pastoral Epistles, by employing a virtue so highly esteemed by forces hostile to Christianity, manifest a deep desire to establish good order within the church as well as to foster goodwill with the church's non-Christian neighbors.
Review
"'Piety' was an enormously important concept in political, civic, philosophical, and religious discourse in both the Greek (eusebeia) and Latin (pietas) worlds of the first and second centuries C.E. In this marvelous treatment, Christopher Hoklotubbe discusses not only the elevation and use of piety language in these letters but also shows how such language functioned in the world that these documents reflect." John T. Fitzgerald, Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity, University of Notre Dame
"Should Christians participate in politics? Since the second century, Christ-followers have occupied strange space on the political map of their day. With a fresh approach, Chris Hoklotubbe argues that the Pastoral Epistles translate the gospel in terms of Roman pietas--a broad array of social, political, and religious obligations thought to sustain the cosmos and everything in it." Clare K. Rothschild, Associate Professor of Scripture Studies, Lewis University
"T. Christopher Hoklotubbe is to be commended for furnishing us with the first monograph-length treatment on the theme of pietas (eusebeia)--one of the Roman Empire's most celebrated ideals--in the Pastoral Epistles. The result is an exciting and thorough new study that every person interested in the emergence of Christianity as well as method in the study of Paul in the Roman Empire needs to read." Harry O. Maier, Professor of New Testament and Early Christian Studies, Vancouver School of Theology
"Civilized Piety offers fresh insights into the Pastorals for most, perhaps all, readers...[Hoklotubbe] engages with feminist scholarship on the New Testament too frequently ignored...Civilized Piety recommends itself not only for its explication and analyses of the material, but also for the avenues it opens to further research." Mary R. D'Angelo, Emeritus Associate Professor of Theology, University of Notre Dame (from Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2018.04.30)
"Scholarly attention to the rhetorical strategies of the New Testament writers has been one of the happy outcomes of the last thirty years or so of biblical research. Civilized Piety makes an outstanding contribution to this enterprise, even more so given the relative paucity of such treatments with respect to the Pastorals." Mark Harding, former Dean of Australian College of Theology (from Review of Biblical Literature)
"Civilized Piety is a model study for those who would wish to situate the New Testament's Christian discourse within its ancient Mediterranean setting. I found the study to be immensely illuminating, enjoyable to read, and usually persuasive." Joshua W. Jipp, Associate Professor of New Testament at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (from Reading Religion)
"Exceptional and elegantly argued." Scot McKnight, Julius R. Mantey Chair of New Testament, Northern Seminary (from Jesus Creed)
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About the Author
T. Christopher Hoklotubbe (Th.D., Harvard University) is an Assistant Professor of Religion at Cornell College, Mount Vernon, Iowa. He is a former Louisville Institute Postdoctoral Fellow and a Postdoctoral Faculty Fellow in Theological Studies at Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA. Hoklotubbe has been recognized as a Society of Biblical Literature Regional Scholar for 2017, having been nominated by the New England and Eastern Canada Region.