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Exegetical gems from Biblical Hebrew Proverbs, Ecclesiastes Philippians & Philemon Ezra-Nehemiah The first letter to the Corinthians God's heart for children Dictionary of New Testament background

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Proverbs, Ecclesiastes Judges Joshua: A Commentary Ruth The shape and shaping of the book of Psalms Psalms Psalms: Volume 3 (90 - 150) Psalms: Volume 2 (42 - 89) Psalms: Volume 1 (1-41) Psalms 73-150 Ezra-Nehemiah Ezekiel Joshua to Kings Reading Samuel Deuteronomy The Book of Deuteronomy Reading Deuteronomy Deuteronomy Reading Judges Judges and Ruth Joshua, Judges, Ruth The Expositor's Bible commentary Leviticus-Numbers The book of Genesis Isaiah 40-66 Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon Psalms 51-150 Psalms 1-50 Job 1-2 Kings, 1-2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1-2 Samuel Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy Genesis 1-11 The Twelve Prophets Genesis 1-11

Commentaries - New Testament


Discovering Revelation Revelation Revelation Reading the epistles of James, Peter, John, and Jude as scripture Epistles of 1, 2, 3 John James Hebrews, James 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus 2 Timothy and Titus Exalting Jesus in 1 & 2 Thessalonians Reading Galatians, Philippians, and 1 Thessalonians 1 & 2 Thessalonians Colossians and Philemon Philippians Philippians & Philemon Philippians Philippians, Colossians Reading Luke Luke Luke Mark The Epistle to the Hebrews Luke Mark Ephesians The IVP Bible background commentary :  Old Testament John Matthew Matthew Romans Romans Romans The Epistle to the Romans 1 Corinthians 1 Corinthians Acts

Philemon: A Transformation Of Social Orders

Manyika, Batanayi Itayi

Philemon: A Transformation Of Social Orders - Johannesburg, South Africa South African Theological Seminary 2019 - 421 pages PDF A4 Abstract, TOC



Rarely does one construct an entire ideological edifice based on a short portion of Scripture. Yet, evident in Philemon is a high concentration of multiple Pauline themes, intermingling in the dynamic life of a house church, prompted by relational friction between a paterfamilias and his slave. Launching from the central claim that the Gospel has the capacity to transform the relationships between powerbrokers and the disenfranchised, this dissertation identifies power disparities in the relationships between masters and slaves in the first-century CE Graeco-Roman world and across the ages. It engages Philemon’s history of interpretation from the Early Church to the present day, underlining how a society’s understanding of slavery is inextricably linked to the ever-shifting events in front of the text. A (re)construction and description of historical and societal matters, linked to Philemon’s context, is drawn up giving higher definition to the silent contextual matters at work in the letter’s occasion. Distinctive literary features, deliberative rhetoric, and a description of Social Identity Theory and Social-Scientific Criticism are harnessed to execute a hybridized exegetical and theological inquiry of the text linked to the project’s central theoretical claim. After critically correlating the Graeco-Roman milieu with the Southern African context, via the auspices of a derived etic, the exegetical and theological findings are appropriated in the relationships between Christian employers and Christian domestic workers, heralding a transformation of social orders. This project identifies the anti enthusiastic attitude as the preferred stance on slavery from the Early Church to the Reformation, diminishing with the rise of abolitionist activity. With Paul using slavery as a metaphor for Christ followership, it navigates the complexities and nuances latent in Philemon’s portrayal of the phenomenon. Furthermore, in discussing ancient and contemporary power disparities this research is translated into different contexts. Accompanying such possibility, this dissertation adds a voice from the Majority world to Pauline scholarship, an area dominated by Occidental figures and perspectives. From this treatise it is hoped that the elevation of the slave into a beloved brother(Phlm 16),would serve as a prompt leading to the transformation of the guild, as the church and academy strive to realise Paul’s therapeutic vision, the Gospel, in context.

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