Description

Book Synopsis
To Live in the Spirit: Paul and the Spirit of God brings to light a fresh understanding of the Greek concept πνεῦμα (spirit) in Paul’s ethical teaching. Placing Paul and his mixed audience within the Hellenistic Jewish and Greek (philosophical) traditions of the ancient world, this book examines his new message concerning πνεῦμα’s primary function in the acquisition of virtues and avoidance of vices. Looking in detail at the various ways in which Paul views πνεῦμα in his seven undisputed letters, Naveros Córdova explores πνεῦμα’s development from Paul’s initial ethical reflections in his early letters to a more mature view in his later letters. Naveros Córdova argues that it is within these traditions, represented by major Hellenistic Jewish and Greco-Roman writers, that Paul construes the framework of his ethical teaching. Paul finds in the power of God’s πνεῦμα a new ethical alternative for his mixed audience to living lives pleasing to God outside the observance of the Mosaic Law. Naveros Córdova demonstrates how Paul draws upon Platonic (immaterial πνεῦμα) and Stoic (material πνεῦμα) language that would have been familiar to his hearers in the early Christian communities to create a persuasive understanding of ethical performance and to show that the moral life of the believers springs from that πνεῦμα received from God. In his efforts to highlight πνεῦμα’s central role in his ethics, Paul moves beyond both traditions by describing the “Christification” of πνεῦμα not only in Stoic terms, but also in Middle Platonic categories of the first century CE.

Trade Review
Nélida Naveros Córdova offers an important and far-reaching contribution to Paul’s pneumatology, who above all develops perspectives on the Spirit’s relationship to ethics. For the author, the distinction between earlier and later Pauline letters is fundamental. As a Hellenistic Jew who participates in philosophical discourse and describes ethical objectives in platonic terms, but is also significantly influenced by the Septuagint, Paul develops in his letters a pneumatology that aims at liberation and life in terms of virtues. This ethical connotation and the linking of the Spirit’s efficacy to Christ represent the particularities of Paul‘s conceptualization. While current research often completely ignores a connection between ethics and pneumatology in Paul’s thought, Naveros Córdova demonstrates convincingly the increasingly fundamental importance that pneumatology gains for ethics in the Pauline letters. -- Prof. Dr. Friedrich W. Horn, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz

Table of Contents
Introduction Chapter 1 Understanding the Spirit: The Place of Πνεῦμα in a Greco-Roman World of Jews and Gentiles Chapter 2 The New Age Concerning Πνεῦμα’s Preeminence in Paul’s Early Letters Chapter 3 The Development of Πνεῦμα as Font of All Christian Virtues in the Practical Life of Believers in the Later Letters Chapter 4 Πνεῦμα and the New Conception of Liberation Pervading Paul’s Ethical Teaching Chapter 5 Conclusion: Final Remarks

To Live in the Spirit: Paul and the Spirit of God

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    A Hardback by Nélida Naveros Córdova, CDP

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      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 29/11/2018
      ISBN13: 9781978700963, 978-1978700963
      ISBN10: 1978700962

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      To Live in the Spirit: Paul and the Spirit of God brings to light a fresh understanding of the Greek concept πνεῦμα (spirit) in Paul’s ethical teaching. Placing Paul and his mixed audience within the Hellenistic Jewish and Greek (philosophical) traditions of the ancient world, this book examines his new message concerning πνεῦμα’s primary function in the acquisition of virtues and avoidance of vices. Looking in detail at the various ways in which Paul views πνεῦμα in his seven undisputed letters, Naveros Córdova explores πνεῦμα’s development from Paul’s initial ethical reflections in his early letters to a more mature view in his later letters. Naveros Córdova argues that it is within these traditions, represented by major Hellenistic Jewish and Greco-Roman writers, that Paul construes the framework of his ethical teaching. Paul finds in the power of God’s πνεῦμα a new ethical alternative for his mixed audience to living lives pleasing to God outside the observance of the Mosaic Law. Naveros Córdova demonstrates how Paul draws upon Platonic (immaterial πνεῦμα) and Stoic (material πνεῦμα) language that would have been familiar to his hearers in the early Christian communities to create a persuasive understanding of ethical performance and to show that the moral life of the believers springs from that πνεῦμα received from God. In his efforts to highlight πνεῦμα’s central role in his ethics, Paul moves beyond both traditions by describing the “Christification” of πνεῦμα not only in Stoic terms, but also in Middle Platonic categories of the first century CE.

      Trade Review
      Nélida Naveros Córdova offers an important and far-reaching contribution to Paul’s pneumatology, who above all develops perspectives on the Spirit’s relationship to ethics. For the author, the distinction between earlier and later Pauline letters is fundamental. As a Hellenistic Jew who participates in philosophical discourse and describes ethical objectives in platonic terms, but is also significantly influenced by the Septuagint, Paul develops in his letters a pneumatology that aims at liberation and life in terms of virtues. This ethical connotation and the linking of the Spirit’s efficacy to Christ represent the particularities of Paul‘s conceptualization. While current research often completely ignores a connection between ethics and pneumatology in Paul’s thought, Naveros Córdova demonstrates convincingly the increasingly fundamental importance that pneumatology gains for ethics in the Pauline letters. -- Prof. Dr. Friedrich W. Horn, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Chapter 1 Understanding the Spirit: The Place of Πνεῦμα in a Greco-Roman World of Jews and Gentiles Chapter 2 The New Age Concerning Πνεῦμα’s Preeminence in Paul’s Early Letters Chapter 3 The Development of Πνεῦμα as Font of All Christian Virtues in the Practical Life of Believers in the Later Letters Chapter 4 Πνεῦμα and the New Conception of Liberation Pervading Paul’s Ethical Teaching Chapter 5 Conclusion: Final Remarks

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