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Three Ways to Imitate paul in Late Antiquity: Ekstasis, Ekphrasis, Epektasis/ by., Michael Motia

By: Material type: ArticleArticlePublication details: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2021 (January)Description: pages, 96-117Subject(s):
Contents:
Robert Orsi's argument that religion, more than a system of "meaning making." is a network of relationships between heaven and earth" help us understand what is at stake in imitation for early Christians. The Question for Orsi is not, "What does it mean to imitate Paul?" Christians argue over both what to imitate (Who is Paul?) and how to imitate (How should Christians relate to Paul in order to be like him or to render him present?) The what has received lots of scholarly attention; this paper focuses on the how. I compare the range of possibilities of how to imitate Paul by focusing on three influential accounts of mimesis: Pseudo-Dyonysius the Areopagite (ekstasis), John Chrysostom (ekphrasis), and Gregory of Nyssa (epektasis)
In: Harvard Theological Review
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Item type Current library Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode
Continuing Resources (Periodicals) Continuing Resources (Periodicals) New Theological College Back Issue (Serials) Vol. 114, No. 01 (January 2021) Available HTR11401

Robert Orsi's argument that religion, more than a system of "meaning making." is a network of relationships between heaven and earth" help us understand what is at stake in imitation for early Christians. The Question for Orsi is not, "What does it mean to imitate Paul?" Christians argue over both what to imitate (Who is Paul?) and how to imitate (How should Christians relate to Paul in order to be like him or to render him present?) The what has received lots of scholarly attention; this paper focuses on the how. I compare the range of possibilities of how to imitate Paul by focusing on three influential accounts of mimesis: Pseudo-Dyonysius the Areopagite (ekstasis), John Chrysostom (ekphrasis), and Gregory of Nyssa (epektasis)

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