The heavenly trumpet : John Chrysostom and the art of Pauline interpretation

Bibliographic Information

The heavenly trumpet : John Chrysostom and the art of Pauline interpretation

Margaret M. Mitchell

Westminster John Knox Press, c2002

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Originally published: Tübingen : Mohr, 2000 in series: Hermeneutische Untersuchungen zur Theologie

Includes bibliographical references (p. [509]-528) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Arguing that all Pauline interpretation depends significantly on the ways in which readers formulate their own images of the apostle, Margaret M. Mitchell posits that John Chrysostom, the most prolific interpreter of the Pauline epistles in the early church, exemplifies this phenomenon. Mitchell brings together Chrysostom's copious portraits of Paul--of his body, his soul, and his life circumstances--and for the first time analyzes them as complex rhetorical compositions built on well-known conventions of Greco-Roman rhetoric. Two appendices offer a fresh translation of Chrysostom's seven homilies de laudibus sancti Pauli and a catalogue of color plates of artistic representations that graphically represent the author/exegete dynamic this study explores.

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