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The Letter to Philemon as Ethical Counterpart of Pauls's Doctrine of Justification

open access: closedBeiheft Zur Zeitschrift Für Die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft Und Die Kunde Der älteren Kirche, 2010
Michael Wolter
exaly   +2 more sources
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Tendencies in the Research on the Letter to Philemon since 1980

Beiheft Zur Zeitschrift Für Die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft Und Die Kunde Der älteren Kirche, 2010
exaly   +2 more sources

Paul's Letter to Philemon

New Testament Studies, 1987
The Pauline epistle known as Philemon is generally understood to be a letter written by Paul to a slaveowner on behalf of the runaway slave Onesimus requesting that the latter be allowed to return without penalty to the household in which he served. This article proposes a new interpretation of the letter that differs from the traditional in four major
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Contextual Interpretation of the Letter to Philemon in the United States

Beiheft Zur Zeitschrift Für Die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft Und Die Kunde Der älteren Kirche, 2010
exaly   +2 more sources

The Letter to Philemon: A New Translation with Notes and Commentary

Journal of Biblical Literature, 2002
This latest commentary in the ECC series is unique for its exhaustive study of the ancient world at the time Philemon was written. Drawing on secular sources from Greece and Rome, from Christian writers of the time, and from other sections of Scripture, Markus Barth provides a thorough examination of slavery in Paul's day as background to a proper ...
John Byron, Markus Barth, Helmut Blanke
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The Letters to the Colossians and to Philemon

2008
Using the same brilliant exegesis and sound practical insight found in his previous work, Douglas J. Moo here not only accurately explains the meaning of the Letters to the Colossians and to Philemon, but also applies that meaning to twenty-first-century readers. Moo introduces each book with a series of five similar questions: To whom was it
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Places—Real and Imagined—in the Letter to Philemon

Neotestamentica
Abstract: This contribution explores three aspects of the reception history of the Letter to Philemon to highlight the diverse ways in which interpreters have envisioned the spaces presupposed by or mentioned in the letter, as well as the significant impact of certain preconceptions and assumptions on their understanding of these spaces.
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