Sacra Pagina: First Corinthians
2000 Catholic Press Association Award Winner!

One of the most exciting of Paul's letters, 1 Corinthians offers a vantage point from which modern readers can reflect on diverseness in Christian Churches today. In First Corinthians, Raymond Collins explores that vantage point as well as the challenge Paul posed to the people of his time - and continues to pose in ours - to allow the gospel message to engage them in their daily lives.

Paul introduces us to a flesh-and-blood community whose humanness was all too apparent. Sex, death, and money were among the issues they had to face. Social conflicts and tension within their Christian community were part of their daily lives. Paul uses all of his diplomacy, rhetorical skill, and authority to exhort the Corinthian community to be as one in Christ.

In examining Paul's message and method, Collins approaches 1 Corinthians as a Hellenistic letter written to people dealing with real issues in the Hellenistic world. He cites existing Hellenistic letters to show that Paul was truly a letter writer of his own times. Collins makes frequent references to the writings of the philosophic moralists to help clarify the way in which Paul spoke to his beloved Corinthians. He also comments on some aspects of the social circumstances in which the Christians of Corinth actually lived.

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Sacra Pagina: First Corinthians
2000 Catholic Press Association Award Winner!

One of the most exciting of Paul's letters, 1 Corinthians offers a vantage point from which modern readers can reflect on diverseness in Christian Churches today. In First Corinthians, Raymond Collins explores that vantage point as well as the challenge Paul posed to the people of his time - and continues to pose in ours - to allow the gospel message to engage them in their daily lives.

Paul introduces us to a flesh-and-blood community whose humanness was all too apparent. Sex, death, and money were among the issues they had to face. Social conflicts and tension within their Christian community were part of their daily lives. Paul uses all of his diplomacy, rhetorical skill, and authority to exhort the Corinthian community to be as one in Christ.

In examining Paul's message and method, Collins approaches 1 Corinthians as a Hellenistic letter written to people dealing with real issues in the Hellenistic world. He cites existing Hellenistic letters to show that Paul was truly a letter writer of his own times. Collins makes frequent references to the writings of the philosophic moralists to help clarify the way in which Paul spoke to his beloved Corinthians. He also comments on some aspects of the social circumstances in which the Christians of Corinth actually lived.

49.95 In Stock
Sacra Pagina: First Corinthians

Sacra Pagina: First Corinthians

by Raymond Collins
Sacra Pagina: First Corinthians

Sacra Pagina: First Corinthians

by Raymond Collins

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$49.95 
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Overview

2000 Catholic Press Association Award Winner!

One of the most exciting of Paul's letters, 1 Corinthians offers a vantage point from which modern readers can reflect on diverseness in Christian Churches today. In First Corinthians, Raymond Collins explores that vantage point as well as the challenge Paul posed to the people of his time - and continues to pose in ours - to allow the gospel message to engage them in their daily lives.

Paul introduces us to a flesh-and-blood community whose humanness was all too apparent. Sex, death, and money were among the issues they had to face. Social conflicts and tension within their Christian community were part of their daily lives. Paul uses all of his diplomacy, rhetorical skill, and authority to exhort the Corinthian community to be as one in Christ.

In examining Paul's message and method, Collins approaches 1 Corinthians as a Hellenistic letter written to people dealing with real issues in the Hellenistic world. He cites existing Hellenistic letters to show that Paul was truly a letter writer of his own times. Collins makes frequent references to the writings of the philosophic moralists to help clarify the way in which Paul spoke to his beloved Corinthians. He also comments on some aspects of the social circumstances in which the Christians of Corinth actually lived.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814659700
Publisher: Liturgical Press
Publication date: 07/01/2006
Series: Sacra Pagina , #7
Pages: 736
Product dimensions: 6.76(w) x 8.86(h) x 1.51(d)

About the Author

Raymond F. Collins is a Roman Catholic priest and a New Testament scholar. Most of his academic career was spent at the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium, the world’s oldest Catholic university, and at The Catholic University of America in Washington, DC, where he taught and served as the dean of the School of Religious Studies. Among his twenty books are major commentaries on Paul’s First and Second Letters to the Corinthians and the Pastoral Epistles, 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS

Editor’s Preface    xi
Author’s Preface    xiii
Note on References    xvii
Abbreviations    xix

Introduction
1. A Real Letter    1
2. A Hellenistic Letter    6
3. A Long Letter    8
4. A Single Letter?    10
5. A Stylistic Feature    14
6. Problems at Corinth    16
7. Paul’s Rhetoric    17
8. The Issues    20
9. Corinth    21
10. A Theological Perspective    25
11. Outline of the Structure of the Letter    29
General Bibliography    31

Translation, Interpretation, Notes
INTRODUCTION (1:1-9)
A. EPISTOLARY OPENING (1:1-3)    41
B. THANKSGIVING (1:4-9)    55 

BODY OF THE LETTER (1:10–15:58)
A. THEME AND OCCASION (1:10-17)    67
B. FIRST RHETORICAL DEMONSTRATION (1:18–4:21)    86
    1. Wisdom and Power (1:18-31)    89
    2. Paul’s Mission (2:1-5)    115
    3. God’s Wisdom (2:6-16)    121
    4. Mother and Farmer (3:1-9)    139
    5. The Construction (3:10-17)    148
    6. Slogans Reversed (3:18-23)    162
    7. The Ultimate Tribunal (4:1-5)    167
    8. The Lesson of Paul and Apollos (4:6-7)    175
    9. Filled and Hungry (4:8-13)    182
  10. A Letter of Admonition (4:14-16)    192
  11. Recommendation of Timothy (4:17-21)    195
C. SECOND RHETORICAL DEMONSTRATION (5:1–7:40)    203
    1. A Purified Community (5:1-8)    205
    2. Shunning Evil (5:9-13)    216
    3. Use of the Courts (6:1-11)    224
    4. Embodied Existence (6:12-20)    239
    5. Sex Within Marriage (7:1-7)    251
    6. Special Situations (7:8-16)    262
    7. Remain As You Were Called (7:17-24)    273
    8. Advice for the Unmarried (7:25-35)    287
    9. To Marry or Not to Marry (7:36-40)    298
D. THIRD RHETORICAL DEMONSTRATION (8:1–11:1)    304
    1. Food Offered to Idols (8:1-3)    308
    2. The Monotheistic Confession of Faith (8:4-6)    313
    3. Eating and Freedom (8:7-13)    321
    4. Apostolic Rights (9:1-14)    327
    5. Christ’s Slave (9:15-18)    343
    6. For the Sake of the Gospel (9:19-23)    349 
    7. The Games (9:24-27)    357
    8. Learning from Scripture (10:1-13)    363
    9. Avoid Idolatry (10:14-22)    375
  10. Summing Up (10:23–11:1)    382
E. THE FOURTH RHETORICAL DEMONSTRATION (11:2-34)    392
    1. Let Men Be Men and Women Be Women (11:2-16)    393
    2. The Lord’s Supper? (11:17-22)    416
    3. The Lord’s Supper (11:23-26)    425
    4. Judgment (11:27-34)    435
F. FIFTH RHETORICAL DEMONSTRATION (12:1–14:40) 441
    1. A Matter of Principle (12:1-3)    445
    2. Allotment of Gifts (12:4-11)    448
    3. The Body (12:12-26)    457
    4. Christ’s Body (12:27-31a)    466
    5. Not to Have Love (12:31b–13:3)    471
    6. Love’s Rhythm (13:4-7)    478
    7. A Unique Gift (13:8–14:1a)    483
    8. The Greater Gift of Prophecy (14:1b-5)    489
    9. A Trilogy of Cultural Analogies (14:6-12)    494
  10. Praying with Full Participation (14:13-19)    500
  11. Outsiders and Unbelievers (14:20-25)    504
  12. Order in the Assembly (14:26-40)    511
G. SIXTH RHETORICAL DEMONSTRATION (15:1-58)    525
    1. The Creed (15:1-11)    528
    2. If Christ Has Not Been Raised (15:12-19)    540
    3. Ultimate Victory (15:20-28)    546
    4. An Exhortation (15:29-34)    556
    5. How Can the Dead Be Raised? (15:35-44a)    562
    6. The Last Adam (15:44b-49   ) 568
    7. Victory over Death (15:50-58)    573 
CLOSING (16:1-24)
    1. Collection for the Holy Ones (16:1-4)    585
    2. Travel Plans (16:5-9)    590
    3. Timothy and Apollos (16:10-12)    594
    4. Goodbye (16:13-14)    599
    5. Commendation of Stephanas (16:15-18)    602
    6. Greetings (16:19-21)   607
    7. Solemn Farewell (16:22-24)    613

Indexes
Index of Scripture References    619
Index of Classical, Jewish, and Patristic Sources    661
Index of Modern Authors    676
Index of Topics    686

Supplementary Bibliography    697
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