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Sister or Wife? : 1 Corinthians 7 and Cultural Anthropology

Part of the The Library of New Testament studies series
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This work investigates the social dynamics within the Corinthian community and the function of Pauls argumentation in the light of those dynamics.

The models of Victor Turner and Mary Douglas, cultural anthropologists, guide the inquiry.

Gordon concludes that the conflict in 1 Corinthians 7 arose as the result of two antithetical views of the root metaphor, In Christ all are children of God, no male and female.

One group supported a kinship system based on patrilineal marriage and hierarchical community structures.

A second group demanded that an egalitarian sibling relationship should order the community.

Paul attempts to persuade both factions that their commitment to each other and to him is primary.

His arguments encourage each group to reconsider the absoluteness of its stance and to learn to live with ambiguity.

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Product Details
Sheffield Academic Press
1850756856 / 9781850756859
Hardback
227.206
01/11/1997
United Kingdom
248 pages
156 x 234 mm, 510 grams