A New Perspective on Paul? Rereading Paul in a Time of Ecological Crisis
Online Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10871/9551Abstract
publication-status: Publishedtypes: Article
© 2010 by SAGE Publications. Post-print version.
Contemporary contexts, crises, and moral values shape the interpretation of Paul, even in rigorously ‘historical’ scholarship, and the new perspective on Paul well illustrates this point. Our current ecological crisis provides a new and urgent context for interpretation, yet one that has scarcely yet registered on the agenda of recent Pauline studies. Beginning with the obvious eco-texts (Rom. 8.19-23; Col. 1.15-20), but insisting on the need to move beyond these, this essay explores the potential for a broader ecological engagement with Paul, arguing that Paul offers resources for an ecological theology and ethics at the heart of which stands the vision of God’s incorporative transformation of the whole creation in Christ and the associated imperative to embody that transformation in human action shaped by the paradigm of Christ’s self-giving for others.
AHRC
Research project: Uses of the Bible in Environmental Ethics
Date
2013-05-21Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:ore.exeter.ac.uk:10871/9551Vol. 33.1, pp. 3 - 30
10.1177/0142064X10365114
AH D001188/1
http://hdl.handle.net/10871/9551
0142-064X
1745-5294
Journal for the Study of the New Testament