While recent publications have examined how NT texts engage with early Roman imperial ideology, no full-scale exploration of Ephesians has been constructed to date. This project provides an original contribution in the field of study by utilizing an eclectic hermeneutic in order to evaluate the plausibility of an imperial-critical reading of Ephesians. Current literature related to imperial-critical readings of Ephesians are surveyed, demonstrating that there are significant gaps in the scholarly literature. This study then employs an eclectic hermeneutic: drawing on speech-act theory, implied/empirical distinctions, and a narrative hermeneutic to construct and evaluate an anti-imperial reading of Ephesians. In doing so, the empirical life-...
The Athenian Council and/or Assembly regularly inscribed decrees in the Agora honouring the young me...
My PhD analyses the imperial “admission” (the so-called “salutatio” and “adoratio”) from the Severan...
International audienceThe epideictic (derived from the Greek term) or demonstrative (Latin origin) g...
While recent publications have examined how NT texts engage with early Roman imperial ideology, no f...
Erin Iosa Imperial Cult in Ephesus: Expressions of Inferiority, Superiority, or Isopolity? Dr. Julie...
Especially in the last few years there has been much discussion on the Time and Place of the Composi...
The following study began as a paper for Dr. Carol Stockhausen in a graduate seminar at Marquette Un...
Traditionally Latin prose letters have been classified in one of two ways: often they are seen as hi...
In reading the Epistle to the Ephesians one is impressed by its peculiar loftiness and its grandeur ...
To determine whether or not the Epistle to the Ephesians was written by the Apostle Paul or by an im...
Epideictic rhetoric has been traditionally stigmatized as fl attery or empty show without any practi...
“What is the primary purpose of Paul’s writing of Ephesians?” “Which paragraph plays the most decis...
Four Latin panegyrics survive from the period 289 to 298. They originate from Gaul. The empire was g...
The aim of the paper is to examine socio-cultural assumptions behind the perception of epigraphic wr...
Moving beyond the methodological issues of a literary-based reassessment of the reign of the last Fl...
The Athenian Council and/or Assembly regularly inscribed decrees in the Agora honouring the young me...
My PhD analyses the imperial “admission” (the so-called “salutatio” and “adoratio”) from the Severan...
International audienceThe epideictic (derived from the Greek term) or demonstrative (Latin origin) g...
While recent publications have examined how NT texts engage with early Roman imperial ideology, no f...
Erin Iosa Imperial Cult in Ephesus: Expressions of Inferiority, Superiority, or Isopolity? Dr. Julie...
Especially in the last few years there has been much discussion on the Time and Place of the Composi...
The following study began as a paper for Dr. Carol Stockhausen in a graduate seminar at Marquette Un...
Traditionally Latin prose letters have been classified in one of two ways: often they are seen as hi...
In reading the Epistle to the Ephesians one is impressed by its peculiar loftiness and its grandeur ...
To determine whether or not the Epistle to the Ephesians was written by the Apostle Paul or by an im...
Epideictic rhetoric has been traditionally stigmatized as fl attery or empty show without any practi...
“What is the primary purpose of Paul’s writing of Ephesians?” “Which paragraph plays the most decis...
Four Latin panegyrics survive from the period 289 to 298. They originate from Gaul. The empire was g...
The aim of the paper is to examine socio-cultural assumptions behind the perception of epigraphic wr...
Moving beyond the methodological issues of a literary-based reassessment of the reign of the last Fl...
The Athenian Council and/or Assembly regularly inscribed decrees in the Agora honouring the young me...
My PhD analyses the imperial “admission” (the so-called “salutatio” and “adoratio”) from the Severan...
International audienceThe epideictic (derived from the Greek term) or demonstrative (Latin origin) g...