Jesus and Marginal Women: The Gospel of Matthew in Social-Scientific Perspective: 5 (Matrix: The Bible in Mediterranean Context)


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About The Book

The Gospel of Matthew Recounts several Interactions between Jesus and marginal women. The urban relatively wealthy community to which Matthew writes faces issues relating to a number of internal problems including whether or how it will keep Jesuss inclusive vision to honor rural Israelite and non-Israelite outcast women in its midst.. Will the Matthean community be faithful to the social vision of Jesuss unconventional kin group? Or will it give way to the crystallized gender social stratification so characteristic of Greco-Roman society as a whole? Employing social-scientific models and careful use of comparative data Love examines structural marginality social role marginality ideological marginality and cultural marginality relative to these interactions with Jesus. He also employs models of gender analysis social stratification healing rites of passage patronage and prostitution.. This book employs a variety of social scientific models and includes chapters that respectively analyze contextual issues and specific stories of Jesus and women in the Gospel of Matthew Stuart Love persuasively argues that while the Gospel of Matthew does not advocate social and gender egalitarianism it does attempt to promote Jesuss vision of a new surrogate family of God that challenges the structures of the agrarian household. This book is a welcome addition to studies on the Gospel of Matthew as well as those on women in early Christianity.---Alicia Batten Associate Professor of Religious Studies University of Sudbury. Loves original studies of Matthean passages about women combine redaction criticism with Gerhard Lenskis macro-social model of an advanced agrarian society and anthropological themes such as male and female space. They show how the Matthean writer follows Jesus in granting dignity to women in a community-as-surrogate-family. Like the Matthean writer Love brings out of his treasure room old and new; and like the Matthean disciples students and scholars alike will understand with new insight---Dennis C. Duling Professor Emeritus Canisius College
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