Teleios in the Epistle of James

Author:

Yeo Seongjae1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of New Testament and Related Literature Faculty of Theology and Religion, University of Pretoria

Abstract

Teleios is an Hellenistic Greek term which refers to an end, goal, purpose or aim, and it means complete, mature, or fully developed, finished. Teleios signifies consummate soundness, and it includes the idea of being whole. In its numerous forms the term teleios arises 100 times in the Greek New Testament. The term was frequently used in the Epistle of James — τέλειον (James 1:4); τέλειον (James 1:17); τέλειον (James 1:25); τελεῖτε (James 2:8); ἐτελειώθη (James 2:22); τέλειος (James 3:2). The frequent use of teleios makes it possible to know that the author clearly expressed his perspective through this word. In the previous research on teleios, Patrick J. Hartin argues that the use of teleios in the Epistle of James is rooted in the Hebrew Scriptures and the LXX as a Jewish coloured term. Hartin’s view is fair to illuminate that teleios is based on the concept of state of the completeness and whole - hearted mental state. Yet, considering that teleios (James 3:2) is used for explaining the process into completeness, called, maturity, such a view of the author of James’ Epistle is closer to the view of the Classical Greek Philosopher, Plato, or the Hellenistic Jewish philosopher, Philo of Alexandria. In addition, teleios (James 1:17) which can be regarded as one of the divine attributes, might be traced back to Platonic or Philonic thinking. Thus, James’ author might be considered as a Hellenised Jew who combined a Jewish concept with a Hellenistic perspective through the term, teleios.

Publisher

AFRICAJOURNALS

Subject

General Medicine

Reference26 articles.

1. Allison, D. C. (2013). James, London: Bloomsbury T&T Clark.

2. Dibelius, M. (1975). James, Philadelphia: Fortress.

3. Edwards, R. B. (1978). The Pagan Dogma of the Absolute Unchangeableness of God. Religious Studies, 14, 305-313.

4. Elliott, J. H. (1993). The Epistle of James in Rhetorical and Social Scientific Perspective Holiness-Wholeness and Patterns of Replication. Biblical Theology Bulletin: A Journal of Bible and Theology, 23(2), 71-81.

5. Evrigenis, I. D. (2002) The Psychology of Politics: The City-Soul Analogy in Plato’s “Republic”. History of Political Thought, 23(4), 590-610.

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