Honor and shame in the Gospel of Matthew
"The pivotal values of the ancient world were honor and shame - the worth one had in the eyes of one's neighbor. Here, Jerome Neyrey clarifies what praise and blame meant to Matthew and his audience. He examines the traditional literary forms for bestowing honor and praise and the conventional grounds for awarding them in Matthew's world. Neyrey argues that the evangelist Matthew was trained in conventional ways, and that his writing employs many of the genres taught in the rhetorical handbooks concerning praise."--Jacket
Print Book, English, ©1998
Westminster John Knox Press, Louisville, Ky., ©1998
viii, 287 pages ; 23 cm
9780664256432, 0664256430
39045027
Abbreviations | vi | ||||
Introduction | 1 | (13) | |||
Part One Matthew: In Other Words | 14 | (56) | |||
| 14 | (21) | |||
| 35 | (35) | |||
Part Two Matthew and the Rhetoric of Praise | 70 | (94) | |||
| 70 | (20) | |||
| 90 | (16) | |||
| 106 | (21) | |||
| 127 | (12) | |||
| 139 | (25) | |||
Part Three The Sermon on the Mount in Cultural Perspective | 164 | (65) | |||
| 164 | (26) | |||
| 190 | (22) | |||
| 212 | (17) | |||
Bibliography | 229 | (49) | |||
Index of Scripture and Other Ancient Sources | 278 | (7) | |||
Index of Subjects and Ancient Authors | 285 |