Many commentators have made suggestions as to the major allusion in Romans 1:18–32, with recent examples including Adam in Genesis 1–2 and decline of civilization narratives. This article proposes instead that the dominant tradition underlying this passage of the letter is that of Sodom. Yet rather than configuring the discussion as an example of how one or more texts have influenced another text, in this case Romans, it is argued that we must consider how traditions such as this would have been mediated to an audience that was largely illiterate. This suggests that the appropriate model lies in the processes of collective memory rather than the practice of intertextuality. A survey of relevant material in Israelite and Christ-follower writ...
From a rhetorical perspective, the article argues that, for Paul, the figure of Adam serves as both ...
The hierarchical stratification of Greco-Roman culture emphasized corporeal features as integral to ...
Scholars of the New Testament have noted the ways in which first century CE writers utilize and tran...
Many commentators have made suggestions as to the major allusion in Romans 1:18–32, with recent exam...
As a number of studies have pointed out, the sin of Sodom was not always assumed to be related to ho...
M.A. (Greek Studies)This study aims to give an account of Paul's argument concerning homo-erotic beh...
MA (New Testament), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014Despite the fact that the major...
The use made of the Sodom and Gomorrah theme by the pre-exilic prophets is investigated first in the...
The article examines ways in which the views of biblical scholars as to the transmission of early Ch...
This thesis rereads Paul’s use of sacrificial language in Romans. Its central argument is that in 1...
[Extract] One of the ways that early Christians used to define themselves as a community was through...
That Sodom and Gomorrah—in Genesis have been a subject of constant cognitive itch is a truism than f...
This essay focuses on a passage from the Letter to the Romans, better on a famous expression: λογικὴ...
Ancient people envisaged a strong link between what was deemed transgressive religious activities an...
A heated contemporary debate interminably swirls around two verses (1:26-27) in Paul's letter to th...
From a rhetorical perspective, the article argues that, for Paul, the figure of Adam serves as both ...
The hierarchical stratification of Greco-Roman culture emphasized corporeal features as integral to ...
Scholars of the New Testament have noted the ways in which first century CE writers utilize and tran...
Many commentators have made suggestions as to the major allusion in Romans 1:18–32, with recent exam...
As a number of studies have pointed out, the sin of Sodom was not always assumed to be related to ho...
M.A. (Greek Studies)This study aims to give an account of Paul's argument concerning homo-erotic beh...
MA (New Testament), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014Despite the fact that the major...
The use made of the Sodom and Gomorrah theme by the pre-exilic prophets is investigated first in the...
The article examines ways in which the views of biblical scholars as to the transmission of early Ch...
This thesis rereads Paul’s use of sacrificial language in Romans. Its central argument is that in 1...
[Extract] One of the ways that early Christians used to define themselves as a community was through...
That Sodom and Gomorrah—in Genesis have been a subject of constant cognitive itch is a truism than f...
This essay focuses on a passage from the Letter to the Romans, better on a famous expression: λογικὴ...
Ancient people envisaged a strong link between what was deemed transgressive religious activities an...
A heated contemporary debate interminably swirls around two verses (1:26-27) in Paul's letter to th...
From a rhetorical perspective, the article argues that, for Paul, the figure of Adam serves as both ...
The hierarchical stratification of Greco-Roman culture emphasized corporeal features as integral to ...
Scholars of the New Testament have noted the ways in which first century CE writers utilize and tran...