Power through Weakness: Paul's Understanding of the Christian Ministry in 2 Corinthians (Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series, Series Number 86)
B**R
A Good Read to Understand the Cultural Background of Corinth
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I read this book after having read Marshall's book on Enmity, Sze-kar Wan's book, Power in Weakness, and Winter's book on Paul and the Philosophers. I think Savage's book is far superior to all these books. Savage takes the point that the correct way to understand the reason why Paul is attacked and disliked in Corinth by both members of the congregation and those who have recently come to the church after having written 1 Corinthians is to be found in the social-self-interest background of Corinth. Savage makes the strong point that too much interest has been focused on the spirituality of those at Corinth at the expense of understanding the cultural setting of Corinth.
J**S
Best on 2 Corinthians that I have read
The best commentary on 2 Corinthians I have read. Easy for lay leaders. It's not a typical verse by verse but helps one understand the background of this church.
B**D
A Must Read!
Fantastic treatment of the passage in its Corinthian context. I wish more books were written with this depth of background material in mind!
A**R
Four Stars
Good bbok
K**C
Excellent!
Mind blowing! A must read for all followers of Christ.
R**E
Scholarly, penetrating, insightful, profoundly helpful
Paul's claim, "When I am weak, then I am strong," appears to be a clear absurdity. It attempts to harmonize two mutually exclusive terms. Christian ministry as comfort experienced through suffering, glory manifested through shame, life working through death, riches won through poverty, and power expressed through weakness borders on gibberish. It at least presents a paradox. In the book Dr. Savage seeks to make sense of this paradox.Dr. Savage argues that it is this paradox-a paradox finding expression in a number of different antitheses-that drives to the heart of what it means to Paul to be a minister (diakonoi) of Christ. To fully comprehend the paradox Dr. Savage argues that we must first understand the background to Paul's paradoxical teaching. Unfortunately, this background is notoriously illusive for two reasons: (1) first, the letter we call 2 Corinthians was directed to "the intruder" (7:12) about whom we know very little, and (2) second, the letter was written to a community of faith enmeshed within a cultural setting about which we know very little.Dr. Savage is a meticulous scholar. But, not only is he an impressive scholar he is also a skilled, insightful, and precise analyst. His insights into the Corinthian culture generally help explain the probable character traits, or at least the tendencies, of the recipients of the letter. Although it is merely alluded to in passing in a few places in the text, under Dr. Savage's meticulous examination it becomes obvious that Paul's paradoxical teaching emerges out of a specific conflict between the apostle and his converts. This conclusion opens the way for a more precise inquiry into the details of that conflict. It is in the pursuit of this inquiry that Dr. Savage makes his most useful contribution to our understanding of 2 Corinthians.It is the radical disjunction between the secular prejudices of the Corinthians and the apostle's own conception of Christ that spawns the paradoxical description of Christian ministry. What we witness in 2 Corinthians is a clash between value systems. The Corinthians were clearly products of the times-secular to the core and intoxicated on the outlook of their world. Paul, on the other hand, was attempting to conform everything he had and everything he did to the story of the cross. Dr. Savage does an outstanding job of framing the difficult teaching of the letter within this all-too-familiar context: secular v. kingdom values.Dr. Savage is able to enumerate the often multiple viewpoints of modern scholarship on the issues he discusses without producing a large, cumbersome commentary (the entire book is less than 200 pages). In addition, Dr. Savage not only explains the multiple alternative viewpoints but he also critiques them offering a logical, coherent alternative without ever coming across as argumentative or demeaning.What results from these profoundly helpful and rare scholarly characteristics is one of the most useful commentaries on 2 Corinthians available. Once the reader has absorbed the information garnered from Dr. Savage's thorough research and seen the point of Paul's letter under his penetrating analysis, what may have previously been a patchy, obscure, and difficult New Testament letter suddenly becomes a masterpiece of persuasion. Not only that, but it also emerges as a living document that powerfully speaks to the core of who we are as a culture in North America.
N**D
Valuable resource
This book was used for my Master's essay on Paul's theology of ministerial weakness in 2Cor. A valuabel resource it provided background and context to 2Cor and I quoted it a number of times in my essay.
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