Das Endgericht bei Paulus : Framesemantische und exegetische Studien zur paulinischen Eschatologie und Soterologie
Stettler, Christian
Das Endgericht bei Paulus : Framesemantische und exegetische Studien zur paulinischen Eschatologie und Soterologie - Mohr Siebeck 20190612
Open Access
In the 'New Perspective on Paul' the last judgment does not play any decisive role. According to other Pauline scholars, Paul, in his many fragmentary references to a last judgment, did not presuppose a consistent conception of judgment, but instead used different and sometimes contradicting motives in different contexts. Christian Stettler counters these views from a cognitive semantic perspective. Since in frame semantics language is seen as an 'access point' to encyclopaedic cognitive concepts, the author argues that judgement texts are references to a more detailed concept of the last judgement that Paul presupposed in his letters and taught in his churches. Stettler offers a full reconstruction of this concept by a semantic analysis of all relevant passages and through more extensive interpretation of central texts. The result is a reading of Paul that offers a way forward both to New Perspective and traditional confessional readings.
Creative Commons
German
978-3-16-155204-5 9783161552045
10.1628/978-3-16-155204-5 doi
Theology & Religion Last Judgment in Paul Paul Judgment
Das Endgericht bei Paulus : Framesemantische und exegetische Studien zur paulinischen Eschatologie und Soterologie - Mohr Siebeck 20190612
Open Access
In the 'New Perspective on Paul' the last judgment does not play any decisive role. According to other Pauline scholars, Paul, in his many fragmentary references to a last judgment, did not presuppose a consistent conception of judgment, but instead used different and sometimes contradicting motives in different contexts. Christian Stettler counters these views from a cognitive semantic perspective. Since in frame semantics language is seen as an 'access point' to encyclopaedic cognitive concepts, the author argues that judgement texts are references to a more detailed concept of the last judgement that Paul presupposed in his letters and taught in his churches. Stettler offers a full reconstruction of this concept by a semantic analysis of all relevant passages and through more extensive interpretation of central texts. The result is a reading of Paul that offers a way forward both to New Perspective and traditional confessional readings.
Creative Commons
German
978-3-16-155204-5 9783161552045
10.1628/978-3-16-155204-5 doi
Theology & Religion Last Judgment in Paul Paul Judgment
