Affiliation:
1. Philip F. Esler, D.D. (Oxford), Portland Chair in New Testament Studies in the University of Gloucestershire, Francis Close Hall Campus, Swindon Road, Cheltenham, GL50 4AZ, UK.. He is the author of Galatians (1998), Conflict and Identity in Romans (2003), and God’s Court and Courtiers in the Book of the Watchers: Re-interpreting Heaven in 1 Enoch 1–36 (2017).
Abstract
This article deploys a social identity approach to argue that Paul wrote 2 Corinthians 6:14–7:1 as an integral part of 2 Corinthians to elucidate Christ-movement identity at a key point in an integrated letter. First, I will critique arguments that the passage is an intrusion based on its alleged awkward positioning between 6:13 and 7:2, proposing instead that it is carefully sited within the larger unit of 6:11–7:4. Secondly, I will critically analyze arguments that its non-Pauline character is suggested by the language used. Thirdly, I will explain the presence of 6:14–7:1 in 2 Corinthians as a means whereby, at a critical point in his argument, Paul made a positive statement concerning Christ-movement identity for his Corinthian pistoi, that is, the ingroup of Christ-followers who accepted his version of the gospel, as opposed to apistoi. The latter category embraced both idol-worshipping non-Judeans and his Judean opponents in Corinth who advocated a rival identity based on a different gospel linked to the Mosaic law. In relation to Paul’s extended re-application of Israelite Scripture in 6:16–18, I will argue for its decontextualized, indeed “oracular” character in a context where Paul aimed to communicate with actual addressees, most of whom were illiterate non-Judeans.
Reference52 articles.
1. Barentsen, Jack. 2011. Emerging Leadership in the Pauline Mission: A Social Identity Perspective on Local Leadership in Corinth and Ephesus. With a Foreword by Philip Francis Esler. Princeton Theological Monograph Series. Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications.
2. Luke
3. Brown, Rupert. 2020. Henri Tajfel: Explorer of Identity and Difference. European Monographs in Social Psychology. London, UK/New York, NY: Routledge.
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