This interdisciplinary study focuses upon two conflicts within early Christianity and demonstrates how these conflicts were radically transformed by the Greco-Roman rhetorical and compositional practice of mimesisthe primary means by which Greco-Roman students were taught to read, write, speak, and analyze literary works. The first conflict is the controversy surrounding Jesuss relationship with his family (his mother and brothers) and the closely related issue concerning his (alleged) illegitimate birth that is (arguably) evident in the gospel of Mark, and then the author of Matthews and the author of Lukes recasting of this controversy via mimetic rhetorical and compositional strategies. I demonstrate that the author of our canonical Luke knew, vehemently disagreed with, used, and mimetically transformed Matthews infancy narrative (Matt 12) in crafting his own. The second controversy is the author of Acts imitative transformation of the Petrine/Pauline controversythat, in Acts 7:5815:30, the author knew, disagreed with, used, and mimetically transformed Gal 12 via compositional strategies similar to how he transformed Matthews birth narrative, and recast the intense controversy between the two pillars of earliest Christianity, Peter and Paul, into a unity and harmony that, historically, never existed.
- | Author: Brad McAdon
- | Publisher: Pickwick Publications
- | Publication Date: Jan 16, 2018
- | Number of Pages: 336 pages
- | Language: English
- | Binding: Paperback/Religion
- | ISBN-10: 1532637721
- | ISBN-13: 9781532637728