Thursday, October 26, 2006

Bruce Winter on 1 Peter

Seek the Welfare of the City - And the Enigma of the First Christians – with Special Reference to I Peter by Bruce W. Winter

Abstract

"The first Christians were an absolute enigma to their compatriots because of what was called by a Christian in the ancient letter to Diognetus ‘the amazing and admittedly paradoxical nature of their own politeia’. That term in Greek did not mean ‘politics’ but rather the first century’s definition of life in the city outside of one’s own household.



1 Peter required the Christians not to have ‘binocular’ vision looking only at their heavenly home but to have ‘monocular’ vision with its two foci, one of which was on the permanent inheritance in heaven and the other on the welfare of the city with the doing of good to others in all the spheres of life. The Christian will ‘sweep the snow off this neighour’s roof’ first before he ‘sweeps his own path’.

While social historians of early Christians and those studying them using recent models of sociology conclude that Christians withdrew from society, a careful analysis of 1 Peter in its social and theological context shows the exact opposite was the case. Christians were commanded to seek the welfare of the city in which they lived and to pray for its peace in the same way the Jewish resident aliens in Babylon had been commanded by Jeremiah to do exactly the opposite. This means that Christians today are meant to be good citizens in seeking by the doing of good the welfare of their city. It is the opposite to the ancient saying ‘If one does not seek his own welfare, then he will be destroyed by heaven and earth’. "

10 points if you can name the city the picture is from.

4 comments:

byron smith said...

Sorry to be taking all the points. It is the Forum Romana. I found the building on the left to be fascinating - it is a church build inside the remains of a pagan temple.

Anonymous said...

Rome? I was going to say that!
I've been there!!! (can I get points for having been there?)

Matthew Moffitt said...

That is fascinating about the church! You have quite a knack for this Byron.

Sorry Spally, but you should be able to get the picture 5 posts down (Caird on Scripture).

byron smith said...

It helps to have Bloglines and be at home working all day - that way, whenever I need a break (every few minutes), I check for updates on the various blogs I read.