Paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 Corinthians

I argue that 1 Corinthians is a unified composition that exhibits kerygmatic rhetoric. That is, Jewish and Greco-Roman resources are brought into the service of an overall arrangement that is creatively suggested by Paul's kerygma of the Messiah who died, rose, and awaits cosmic manifestation....

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Main Author: Malcolm, Matthew R.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2011
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11812/
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author Malcolm, Matthew R.
author_facet Malcolm, Matthew R.
author_sort Malcolm, Matthew R.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description I argue that 1 Corinthians is a unified composition that exhibits kerygmatic rhetoric. That is, Jewish and Greco-Roman resources are brought into the service of an overall arrangement that is creatively suggested by Paul's kerygma of the Messiah who died, rose, and awaits cosmic manifestation. In particular, I demonstrate that the Jewish motif of dual reversal, whereby boastful rulers are destined for destruction while righteous sufferers are destined for vindication, serves as an influential conceptual motif in the formulation of Christian kerygma, and as such may be seen as an interpretative framework and rhetorical resource available to Paul. In 1 Corinthians 1–4 Paul evaluates struggles over leadership in the Corinthian congregation as an implicit expression of human autonomy, and responds by summoning the Corinthians to identify with Christ, by forgoing the role of the boastful ruler and adopting the role of the cruciform sufferer. This identification with the cruciform Christ consequently gives shape to Paul’s ethical instruction in 1 Corinthians 5–14, a section that draws on Jewish and Greco-Roman resources, while exhibiting a pattern of Pauline ethical argumentation expressive of Paul's kerygma of identification with the embodied Christ. In the final chapter of the main body of the letter (1 Corinthians 15), Paul utilises the Corinthian denial of "the resurrection of the dead" as the ultimate paradigm of their refusal to adopt a cruciform orientation, and urges that the dead in Christ will be raised to immortal glory, while present powers will be brought to nothing. I suggest that this attention to the creative influence of Paul’s kerygma on the form of his argumentation represents an important addition to the tools of the Pauline rhetorical analyst. Such an approach results in an historically attentive and exegetically persuasive account of the letter's arrangement that also finds great harmony with the perspective of the fourth century preacher John Chrysostom.
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spelling nottingham-118122025-02-28T11:15:45Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11812/ Paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 Corinthians Malcolm, Matthew R. I argue that 1 Corinthians is a unified composition that exhibits kerygmatic rhetoric. That is, Jewish and Greco-Roman resources are brought into the service of an overall arrangement that is creatively suggested by Paul's kerygma of the Messiah who died, rose, and awaits cosmic manifestation. In particular, I demonstrate that the Jewish motif of dual reversal, whereby boastful rulers are destined for destruction while righteous sufferers are destined for vindication, serves as an influential conceptual motif in the formulation of Christian kerygma, and as such may be seen as an interpretative framework and rhetorical resource available to Paul. In 1 Corinthians 1–4 Paul evaluates struggles over leadership in the Corinthian congregation as an implicit expression of human autonomy, and responds by summoning the Corinthians to identify with Christ, by forgoing the role of the boastful ruler and adopting the role of the cruciform sufferer. This identification with the cruciform Christ consequently gives shape to Paul’s ethical instruction in 1 Corinthians 5–14, a section that draws on Jewish and Greco-Roman resources, while exhibiting a pattern of Pauline ethical argumentation expressive of Paul's kerygma of identification with the embodied Christ. In the final chapter of the main body of the letter (1 Corinthians 15), Paul utilises the Corinthian denial of "the resurrection of the dead" as the ultimate paradigm of their refusal to adopt a cruciform orientation, and urges that the dead in Christ will be raised to immortal glory, while present powers will be brought to nothing. I suggest that this attention to the creative influence of Paul’s kerygma on the form of his argumentation represents an important addition to the tools of the Pauline rhetorical analyst. Such an approach results in an historically attentive and exegetically persuasive account of the letter's arrangement that also finds great harmony with the perspective of the fourth century preacher John Chrysostom. 2011 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11812/1/Paul_and_the_Rhetoric_of_Reversal.pdf Malcolm, Matthew R. (2011) Paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 Corinthians. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Malcolm, Matthew R.
Paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 Corinthians
title Paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 Corinthians
title_full Paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 Corinthians
title_fullStr Paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 Corinthians
title_full_unstemmed Paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 Corinthians
title_short Paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 Corinthians
title_sort paul and the rhetoric of reversal: kerygmatic rhetoric in the arrangement of 1 corinthians
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11812/