Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

Results found: 2

first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last

Search results

Search:
in the keywords:  1 Kor
help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
The Biblical Annals
|
2013
|
vol. 3
|
issue 1
93-107
PL
On the basis of the Greek text of Num 12:12 and of the use which Philo makes of it in the fi rst book of his Allegories of the Laws (176) the present article proposes a new understanding of the metaphor of miscarriage (ἔκτρωμα): a being not only born dead and/or incapable of living, but also deadly. In this double meaning the term utilized by Paul in 1 Cor 15:8 describes the pre-Christian past of the Apostle as both lacking life (as being without Christ) and lethal (as a persecutor of the church of God). The metaphor at the same time, constitutes the starting point of the transformation which occurred in Paul thanks to the apparition of the Risen One: from being dead to alive, and from deadly to being a bearer of life (vv. 9-10). Such a metamorphosis is tangible proof of the power of the Risen One, who even now transforms the lives of his own, and eo ipso also the guarantee of fi nal resurrection, when the good work already begun will be brought to its completion (cf. Phil 1:6).
2
100%
EN
The question "How do you know, wife, whether you will save your husband?" (1 Cor 7:16) closes the so-called 'Paul's marriage privileges' running in the preceding verses of 1 Cor 7. The issue expressed with a question mark refers to mixed marriages. The present essay aims to explore this already much harvested text from a new exegetical perspective. In the first part, the socio-religious context of the audience in the 1 Corinthians is exposed: the background of their beliefs and dilemmas concerning marriage. In the second part, the issues of the married women position in Judaism and in the Greco-Roman culture of the period are explored. The last step of the investigation is the analysis (mainly rhetorical) of Paul's argumentation in 1 Cor 7:16 in the context of 1 Cor 7:12-16. The final conclusion is that a Christian wife (as well as a Christian husband) cannot save ber spouse because, according to Paul 's argumentation in the passage, the responsibility for believers' salvation belongs solely to Christ. Nevertheless, a Christian wife can sanctify ber husband.
PL
Pytanie „Skąd wiesz, żono, czy zbawisz swego męża?” (1 Kor 7,16) zamyka frgament zwany “przywilejem Pawłowym” zaczynający się w poprzednich wersach 1 Kor 7. Kwestia opatrzona znakiem zapytania odnosi się do małżeństw mieszanych. Niniejszy artykuł stawia sobie za cel analizę z perspektywy egzegetycznej tego już gruntownie przebadanego tekstu. W pierwszej części przedstawiony zostaje kontekst socjo-religijny słuchaczy 1 Listu do Koryntian: tło ich wierzeń i problemów związanych z małżeństwem. W drugiej części bada się kwestie pozycji kobiety zamężnej w Judaizmie oraz kulturze Grecko-Rzymskiej. Ostatnim krokiem jest analiza (głównie retoryczna) argumentacji Pawła w 1 Kor 7,16 w kontekście 1 Kor 7,12-16. Konkluzja, do jakiej się dochodzi jest następująca: chrześcijańska żona (tak jak i mąż) nie mogą zbawić współmałżonka, ponieważ, według Pawła, odpowiedzialność za zbawienie wierzącego należy wyłącznie do Chrystusa. Jednakowoż, chrześcijańska żona może uświęcić swojego małżonka.
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.