Category: Religion, St. Paul
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A Week in the Life of Corinth
Jason Maston has a review at Dunelm Road on Ben Witherington’s recently published A Week in the Life of Corinth. Haven’t yet read the book, but it is on my list. Here’s a snippet of Maston’s short review: “I managed to get a copy of Ben Witherington‘s new book A Week in the Life of…
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Easter Reflections
It’s been a busy couple of weeks. Traveling, work shops on digitization and information fluency, pressing publication schedules, and the grind of the semester have reduced the output from this site. I have lots in the work that I hope to get out in the next couple of weeks including a Corinthian Scholarship (monthly). In…
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2 Corinthians: A Select Bibliography
Pepperdine University has provided free access to its past issues of Leaven: A Journal of Christian Ministry through its digital commons site. There are about 20 articles and reviews on Corinth and the Corinthians. Most useful is Carl Holladay’s select bibliography of 2 Corinthians, which actually includes a mix of commentaries, books, and articles on…
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Corinthian Scholarship (February)
Here’s the latest in Corinthian-related scholarship published, presented, or released online in February. These 13 articles, books, and studies represent about 7% of ca 175 studies that triggered Google Scholar alerts last month. There are many, many “false positives” that have little to do with ancient or medieval Corinth, or make only passing and insignificant…
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Pauline and Early Christian Corinth: 2011 Publications
Our series continues today with the 2011 publications related mainly to Early Christian Corinth and the interpretation of 1 Corinthians and 2 Corinthians. About 100 publications on the subject were indexed online this year. The list also includes 2009 and 2010 publications that were reviewed in 2011. As with the other 2010 and 2011 bibliographies, I…
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Three Reflections on 1 Corinthians
Among the fastest growing bodies of digital data related to Corinthian studies are the texts, audio files, and videos of homilies, sermons, and commentary on the New Testament letters of 1 and 2 Corinthians. The former, especially, provides numerous inlets for Christian preaching and teaching and connection to ‘real-world’ issues, for it discusses such varied…
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Corinth at the Tate
Museums are increasingly posting collections of images and artwork online which, on occasion, deal with Corinthian topics. In the midst of the end-of-semester madness, I learned of Tate’s extensive online collection of art through alerts sparked by the posting of Corinthian images on a new beta site (to replace its current digital collection). Some interesting…
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Corinthian Scholarship (November)
Hard to believe that December is already here – quite a lot of new scholarship delivered electronically in November. Bronze Age Erika Weiberg, “The invisible dead : The case of the Argolid and Corinthia during the Early Bronze Age,” in Helen Cavanagh, William Cavanagh and James Roy (eds.), Honouring the Dead in the Peloponnese: Proceedings…
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Corinthiaka
Some varied Corinthiaka to start off the week. The western liturgical calendar flipped this weekend with the first Sunday of Advent. Yesterday’s epistle reading from 1 Corinthians 1:3-9 appropriate describes the anticipation accentuated in the advent season. More on scholars and students of the New Testament setting the scene for understanding Paul’s Corinthian letters. Mark…
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Some Perspective on American Excavations in Corinth: Byzantium and the Avant Garde
I couldn’t make it last week to Grand Forks to hear Franklin & Marshall College professor Kostis Kourelis speak on the topic of Byzantium and the Avant Garde. Thanks to Bill Caraher and the Center for Instructional and Learning Technologies at the University of North Dakota for streaming the lecture live. The video, audio, and…