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Healing in the New Testament

Insights from Medical and Mediterranean Anthropology
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How are we to read and understand stories of Jesus healing the lame, deaf, blind, and those with a variety of other maladies? Pilch takes us beyond the historical and literary questions to examine the social questions of how the earliest followers of Jesus and ancient Judeans understood healing, what roles healers played, and the different emphases on healing among the gospels. In his comparative analysis, the author draws on the anthropology of the Mediterranean as well as the models employed by medical anthropologists to understand peasant societies and their health-care systems. Utilizes social-science models Features a complementary web-site with additional resources
John J. Pilchteaches at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Among his numerous publications are The Cultural World of Jesus: Sunday by Sunday (1995-97), The Cultural Dictionary of the Bible (1999), and Healing in the New Testament (2000). Malina and Pilch have co-authored the Social Science Commentary on the Book of Acts (2008) and the Social-Science Commentary on the Letters of Paul (2005), both from Fortress Press.
Acknowledgments Introduction Basic Perspectives: Healing and Curing Medical Anthropology: Sickness and Disease Selecting an Appropriate Model: Leprosy-A Test Case Healing in Mark Healing in Matthew Healing in Luke-Acts Healing in John Conclusion Discussion Questions Glossary General Bibliography Scripture Index
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