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God as father in Paul: a study of kinship language and identity formation in early Christianity

Mengestu, Abera Mitiku
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Publisher
Fort Worth, TX. : [Texas Christian University],
Date
2011
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Abstract
The central thesis of this study is that the narrative of Acts attempts the recategorization of Judean and non-Judean Christ followers, as well as those on either side of the debate over non-Judean inclusion in the Christ movement, into a common ingroup with a superordinate identity. This is accomplished by presenting Peter and Paul as prototypical of a common superordinate Christian identity in the midst of diversity and conflict within the Christ movement near the end of the first or the beginning of the second century C.E. After reviewing relevant literature on Peter and Paul in Acts and early Christian identity formation, Baker develops a narrative-identity model for biblical interpretation, which is used to read the characterization of Peter and Paul in Acts through the remainder of the study.
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Subject
Subject(s)
Bible. Social scientific criticism.
God Fatherhood Biblical teaching.
Kinship Biblical teaching.
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Genre
Dissertation
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Department
Brite Divinity School