Abstract
AbstractNumerous scholars have argued that in Luke-Acts the location of sacred space or divine presence passes from the Jerusalem temple to Jesus, Christian believers, or both; in Acts, this transfer is understood as integral to the universal mission. The present article argues that such studies overlook the important motif of heaven as temple, which plays a role in Jesus’ trial and crucifixion and the Stephen and Cornelius episodes. Using Edward Soja's spatial theory, previous studies’ binary categorisation of temple space is critiqued. The heavenly temple disrupts and reconstitutes understandings of sacred space, and thus undergirds the universal spread of the Way.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Religious studies,History
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4. “My House Shall Be a House of Prayer”: Regarding the Temple as a Place of Prayer in Acts within the Context of Luke's Apologetical Objective;Holmås;JSNT,2005
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2 articles.
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