ADORAÇÃO AO MENINO JESUS Vos adoro, amável Menino do casebre, o mais humilde e o maior dos filhos dos homens e o mais pobre e o mais rico, o mais frágil e o mais poderoso. Vos bendigo, porque vos haveis dignado descer até mim, para ser meu modelo na prática de todas as virtudes, meu guia nas dificuldades da vida e meu asilo nos dias de aflição. Vos amo, porque vens a mim com amor infinito; com amor generoso, que não se cansa minhas ingratidões; com amor obsequioso, que se anticipa aos tardios impulsos de meu coração; com amor paciente, que espera minha conversão para amar-me mais ternamente ainda. Por isso, com o coração cheio de agradecimento, de joelhos aos pés deste leito de palha, vos adoro, bendigo e amo, com todo o fervor de minha alma, e me atrevo a levantar os meus olhos
até ao meu Deus, que se digna olhar-me ternamente.
até ao meu Deus, que se digna olhar-me ternamente.
(Menino Jesus partilhado pelo nosso irmão Hélio Silva- https://m.facebook.com/senhorsantocristo?__user=100003026611767)
Thursday, November 21, 2013
SBL and my question for N.T. Wright
Column Capital in Saint-Lazare Cathedral Autun, France |
One is a session in which I will give a paper on the death of Cain in art. I will explain how the legend of Cain's death developed from the biblical text and became a favorite topic of medieval artists Here's an abstract of the paper I am delivering in the Bible and Visual Art section.
One of the more peculiar oversights in the Genesis narrative is the failure to mention when and how Cain died. We are, of course, told how Abel died and the deaths of Adam and Seth are both recorded in Gen 5:3-8, yet we are never told about Cain’s death. Instead Cain goes on to marry, raise a family and build a city, but his death is never recorded. For some this created a theological problem. If Cain was allowed to live, what kind of judge was the almighty? Ancient exegetes sometimes solved this problem by inserting details about Cain’s death as well as elements of divine retribution for his murder of Abel. The most sophisticated of these interpretive expansions is the legend that Cain was killed by Lamech. By expanding Lamech’s speech in Gen 4:23-24, interpreters were able to fill in the story’s lacuna and thus guarantee Cain was justly punished. While this story is not as well-known today, it was familiar to many in the past. The story of Lamech killing Cain is visible in the architecture of churches, such as Saint-Lazare in Autun, France and the Modena Cathedral in Italy, and in the engravings of Lucas van Leyden, Jacques Legrand and the Egerton Genesis Picture Book. This paper will demonstrate how the theological questions raised by the text were answered not just with pen and parchment, but in the artwork that enhanced the life of the church. In a time when many couldn’t or didn’t read the Bible, illustrations of Cain’s death helped to answer the questions some would have raised about the circumstances surrounding the first recorded murder and the punishment of its perpetrator.
The other session I will attend is with N.T. Wright to which I was invited by Fortress Press. As many will now know, Tom has published his massive (1700 pages!) Paul and the Faithfulness of God. I have been asked to attend a session with bloggers who will engage with Wright about his new book and other aspects of his scholarship. If there is WiFi in the suite where we are meeting I will attempt to live blog the session. Otherwise, I will post on it later.
In the meantime, here is my question for N.T. Wright.
In Paul and the Faithfulness of God (PFG) you compare Pliny’s letter to Sabinianus with Paul’s letter to Philemon. As part of your analysis you suggest that the letters demonstrate the different worldviews that existed between the two authors. You suggest that resident in Philemon are echoes of Ex 21 and Dt. 15 that are in Paul’s mind as he requests that Philemon accept Onesimus back and perhaps free him (p. 15). This “echo of Exodus,” you suggest, demonstrates that each letter encapsulates “a completely different worldview” (p.18-19).
In light of these suggestions, I wonder if you would comment on Paul’s words to slaves in 1 Cor 7:21-22. Here Paul says to those in the audience who are enslaved “were you called as a slave? Don’t worry about it.” While I agree with the majority of modern scholars that the elliptical phrase in 7:21 probably allows for manumission[1], it does seem that the echoes of Exodus are missing in this passage. I do not see where in PFG you address the issues of 1 Cor 7:21-22 and how that passage may impact your understanding of Paul’s worldview or Exodus shaped prism. Does Paul have one worldview in Philemon and another in 1 Cor 7:21-22? It seems that although freedom may extend to slaves metaphorically, it isn’t always that way practically and Paul’s seemingly contradictory statements could suggest that Paul really isn’t all that different from Pliny.
[1] Manumission is the act of a slave owner freeing his or her slaves. » http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manumission