A feast of meanings : eucharistic theologies from Jesus through Johannine circles /

The monograph analyses eucharistic texts on the basis of the social practices which generated them. Six stages of ideology are identified. Jesus himself practised fellowship at meals as celebrations of Israel's purity (stage 1), and later insisted that a pure meal was a better sacrifice than an...

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Main Author: Chilton, Bruce.

Format: eBook

Language: English

Published: Leiden ; New York : E.J. Brill, 1994.

Series: Novum Testamentum, Supplements 72.
Novum Testamentum Supplements Online, ISBN: 9789004264557.

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Call Number: BV823 .C45 1994

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Summary:The monograph analyses eucharistic texts on the basis of the social practices which generated them. Six stages of ideology are identified. Jesus himself practised fellowship at meals as celebrations of Israel's purity (stage 1), and later insisted that a pure meal was a better sacrifice than an offering in the Temple (stage 2). The circle of Peter made such meals into covenantal celebrations; Jesus became a new Moses (stage 3). In order to militate against the full participation of non-Jews, the circle of James invented the full identifications with Passover (stage 4). Paul resisted any such limitations (stage 5). The Synoptic tradition accepted the Jacobean chronology, but joined Paul in developing the Hellenistic theme of Jesus as heroic martyr, and in explaining eucharist as a means of effecting solidarity with Jesus (stage 5). The Johannine ideologies transformed the idiom of eucharist by making Jesus into the paschal lamb which is consumed (stage 6). A conclusion relates the practices identified to the sources behind the Gospels; and shows how practice is key to the meanings of eucharistic texts.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xi, 210 pages) : illustrations.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (p. 195-201) and index.
ISBN:9789004267053
ISSN:0167-9732 ;
Access:Available to subscribing member institutions only.