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Donald Dale Walker advances biblical lexicography by carefully identifying and illustrating a semantic field present in 2 Corinthians 10-13, with particular focus on the key terms praytes and epeieikeia. In addition, this study contributes to the recent interest in the investigation of Paul and politics by outlining the ideology of good rule and showing how it guided Paul's christological imagination. By attributing popular ideas of good rule to Christ, Paul forged a rhetoric that he could use to promote his agenda in Corinth. The rhetoric of populist appeal is also the key to understanding…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Donald Dale Walker advances biblical lexicography by carefully identifying and illustrating a semantic field present in 2 Corinthians 10-13, with particular focus on the key terms praytes and epeieikeia. In addition, this study contributes to the recent interest in the investigation of Paul and politics by outlining the ideology of good rule and showing how it guided Paul's christological imagination. By attributing popular ideas of good rule to Christ, Paul forged a rhetoric that he could use to promote his agenda in Corinth. The rhetoric of populist appeal is also the key to understanding Paul's self-presentation in 2 Corinthians 10-13.

Paulus' Mahnung zur Nachsicht (2 Kor 10,1). Populistische Ideologie und Rhetorik in einem Brieffragment des Paulus. Von Donald Dale Walker.
Unter dem Aspekt der biblischen Lexikographie untersucht Donald Dale Walker 2 Kor 10-13, einen bezüglich der verwendeten Rhetorik extrem dramatischen Text des Paulus. Er zeigt auf, wie sehr dieser Text auf allgemeingültige Ideen und argumentative Strategien der hellenistischen Welt aufbaut. Der Autor deckt die Verbindungen zwischen Sprache, Ideen, Politik und Selbstdarstellung auf und zeigt, wie logisch aber auch aggressiv Paulus debattiert, indem er seinem Publikum bekanntes Material mit Ironie und Parodie vermischt darbietet.

Donald Dale Walker examines one of Paul's most rhetorically dramatic texts in order to reveal how it relies on the commonplace ideas and argumentative strategies of the Hellenistic world. As a result, the reader can see how the apostle invented his ideas and appreciate how inextricably Paul's mission was wrapped up in the world in which he lived.
Autorenporträt
Donald Dale Walker: Born 1961; 1998 Ph.D. University of Chicago; currently, Associate Director of Development, University of Chicago Library.