His missionary work . . . must be conceived not simply in terms of a traveling evangelist offering people a new religious experience, but of an ambassador for a king-in-waiting, establishing cells of people loyal to this new king, and ordering their lives according to his story, his symbols, and his praxis, and their minds according to his truth. This could only be construed as deeply counter-imperial, as subversive to the whole edifice of the Roman Empire; and there is in fact plenty of evidence that Paul intended it to be so construed, and that when he ended up in prison as a result of his work he took it as a sign that he had been doing his job properly.
Tuesday, July 12, 2005
Paul and Empire
Of all the recent works on Paul and Empire, my favourite article is Wright's Paul's Gospel and Caesar's Empire. In particular I like the following quote:
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