The Intimacy of Paul to the Thessalonians in 1Thess. 2: 7b-12

Authors

  • Sotirios Despotis Department of Social Theology of Athens University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15290/elpis.2014.16.12

Keywords:

beneficent nurse, intimacy, benevolence, metaphor

Abstract

In one of the earliest documents of Christianity, in a highly patriarchal society, when addressing Gentile Christians, Paul did not hesitate to liken himself not only to a father, but also to a woman who cares for her own children. In contrast to itinerant philosophers, he did not only preach, but by the example of his life showed love for them, even to the point of sacrificing his being. The metaphor of the mother relates among other things with the admonition to avoid prostitution and the koinonia of all during and after the Last Judgment. In the oldest document of Christianity, Paulspeaks to Christians of all nations and does not stop, in a upmost Patriarchal society, trying to assimilate himself with the image of a woman in the way she nurtures and cares for her own children. He does not simply preach, but unlike the wandering philosophers, he has such calmness, compassion and love for them in which he gives his soul, his being. Simultaneously, he is a father, since with his example and sayings, he teaches everyone, individually, to stay away from iniquity and prays unceasingly. The presentation of the sender as a mother and father of the recipients, brothers of the newborn Church of Thessaloniki, relates to the call to stay away from harlotry and that everybody will coexist during and after the Second Coming of our Lord. Translation by: Nikolaos Georgantonis

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References

Burke T. J., Family Matters: A Socio-Historical Study of Kinship Metaphors in 1 Thessalonians, (JSNTSup 247) London: Sheffield Academic Press 2003.

- Paul’s Role as ‘Father’ to his Corinthian ‘Children’ in Socio-Historical Context (1 Cor. 4:14-21), in: Paul and the Corinthians: Studies on a Community in Conflict. Essays in Honour of Margaret Thrall. Supplements to Novum Testamentum, ed. Trevor J. Burke and J. Keith Elliott, Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers 2003, p. 95-113.

Caragounis Chrys, Did Paul Behave as an Infant or Imbecile, or as a Gentle Nurse?, online: http://www.chrys-caragounis.com/Studies/Did%20Paul%20Behave.pdf, 01.08.2014.

Galanis J., Η Πρώτη Επιστολή του Απ. Παύλου προς Θεσσαλονικείς, Thessaloniki 1996.

Gerber Christine, Paulus und seine ‘Kinder’. Studien zur Beziehungsmetaphorik der paulinischen Briefe (Beihefte zur Zeitschrift für die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft - BZNW 1360) Berlin-New York: Walter de Gruyter 2005.

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Published

2014-11-09

How to Cite

Despotis, S. (2014). The Intimacy of Paul to the Thessalonians in 1Thess. 2: 7b-12. Elpis, (16), 99–111. https://doi.org/10.15290/elpis.2014.16.12

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Articles