Our Brother Beloved

BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781481315319

Purpose and Community in Paul's Letter to Philemon

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By Stephen E. Young
Imprint:
BAYLOR UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
233 x 195 mm
Weight:
330 g
Pages:
256

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Description

Stephen E. Young serves as Senior Lecturer in Biblical Studies at Perth Bible College in Perth, Australia.

Introduction 1 The Need for a New Reading of Paul's Letter to Philemon 2 Reading in Search of Social Impact: A New Approach to Paul's Letter to Philemon 3 Rereading Paul's Letter to Philemon: Positioning Brother Onesimus within the Christian Community 4 Welcoming Brother Onesimus: Becoming a Community of Deliverance Excursus: Would It Have Been Too Problematic for Philemon to Manumit Onesimus?

"...[Young] saturates his study with sterling scholarship on enslavement ( Keith R. Bradley, Orlando Patterson, and Sandra Joshel), on Paul (Lloyd A. Lewis, Clarice J. Martin, and Wayne A. Meeks), on the effective history of Paul's short letter (E. Fox-Genovese, E.D. Genovese, Mark A. Noll, and David Brion Davis), and on some of the most pressing matters of more recent times, from the War on Drugs to 'contemporary forms of slavery such as debt bondage, child slavery, forced prostitution, servile marriage, and sweatshops' (197 n. 59). Perhaps along the way as well, Young offers us a summons to rethink our traditional way of referencing one of Paul's prison letters." --Abraham Smith "Review of Biblical Literature" In Our Brother Beloved, Stephen Young offers a careful reading of Philemon that reckons with the complicated interpretive history of Paul's letter, considers the text through an alternative methodological lens, and proposes that the letter offers a fresh way in which to view both first-century and twenty-first-century community construction. --Jonathon Lookadoo "Reviews in Religion and Theology" Young's work is thorough, well-argued, and hermeneutically and theologically perceptive. But perhaps most of all, it is timely. At this moment in the history of the United States when issues of race and racial justice are demanding attention by those who name Christ as Lord, Young has provided a fresh and convincing liberative reading of a text that offers a potential healing balm for the diseased social imagination that characterizes much of White American Christianity. --Andy Johnson "Bulletin for Biblical Research" Young's book is complex, but his lesson is masterful, more urgent and necessary than ever. --Alvaro Silva "Mayeutica"

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