Fortress Press

The Past as Legacy: Luke-Acts and Ancient Epic

The Past as Legacy

Luke-Acts and Ancient Epic

Marianne Palmer Bonz (Author)

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This study addresses the genre and interpretation of Luke through Acts in the light of its contemporary social, literary, and ideological milieu, particularly as these elements are reflected in the Latin epics contemporary with Luke-Acts and in their famous Augustan prototype, Virgil's Aeneid. Literary evidence indicating that Virgil's works had been translated into Greek prose by the middle of the first century makes this line of inquiry especially promising. Interpreting Luke-Acts as a prose adaptation of heroic or historical epic provides a hermeneutical model that is both universal in its theological message and essentially popular in its narrative presentation.

Beginning with the question of literary occasion, Bonz introduces the particular configuration of historical circumstances that produced the great foundational epics of Gilgamesh, the Iliad and Odyssey, as well as the Aeneid, and suggests that the historical situation for the composition of Luke-Acts was closely analogous in key respects, for example: literary structure, epic journey, divine mission, prophecy, and reversal of destiny.
  • Publisher Fortress Press
  • Format Paperback
  • ISBN 9780800632250
  • Pages 240
  • Publication Date March 2, 2000

Reviews

reviewed by James L. Bailey, Wartburg Theological Seminary, Dubuque, Iowa

"This significant book by Marianne Palmer Bonz seeks to answer the scholarly debate regarding the literary genre of Luke-Acts. ...Bonz's study is convincing. ...Careful readers can gain valuable insights into Luke-Acts by focusing on Chapter 4, "The Dramatic Unfolding of Prophecy adn History in Luke-Acts," and Chapter 5, "Luke-Acts Reconsidered," in which she surveys the major sections of both volumes for their stylistic features and dramatic movement. Pastors have much to learn from Bonz regarding the character and scope of Luke's historical and theological vision."

Table of Contents

    Preface
    Abbreviations

  1. CURRENT PROBLEMS OF GENRE AND INTERPRETATION IN LUKE-ACTS

  2. Double Vision in Twentieth-Century Lukan Studies
    Historiography vs. "History-Telling": The Great Epics of Antiquity
    Luke-Acts: A Fundational Epic for the Early Christian Church?
     
  3. THE AENEID: ROME'S SACRED HISTORY

  4. Antecedents and Influences
    Virgil and the Historical Context of the Aeneid
    Overture: Themes and Structures in Book 1
    Prophecy, Journey, and the Divine Mission
    War and Reversal
    The Aeneid as a Paradigm and Inspiration for Luke-Acts
     
  5. FIRST-CENTURY ADAPTATIONS OF VIRGILIAN EPIC

  6. Promulgating the Myth and Message of the Aeneid
    From Augustus to Vespasian: Lucan's De Bello Civili
    Literature and Ideology under Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian
    Statius's Thebaid: Pessimistic Rejoinder to Virgilian Prophecy
    Valerius Flaccus's Argonautica: Revising Augustan Eschatology
    Silius Italicus's Punica: Historical Extension of Virgilian Mythology
    The Legacy of Latin Epic and Its Relevance for Luke-Acts
     
  7. THE DRAMATIC UNFOLDING OF PROPHECY AND HISTORY IN LUKE-ACTS

  8. Luke's Role in the Development of Early Christian Tradition
    Luke and the Historical Context of Luke-Acts
    Viewing Luke-Acts from Its Narrative Center: Acts 2
    "The House of Israel" and Themes of Division Reversal
     
  9. LUKE-ACTS RECONSIDERED
  10. A Suitable Introduction for Literate Greek Prose: Luke 1:1-4
    The Dramatic Overture: Luke 1-2
    Inauguration of the Mission and Initial Opposition: Luke 3-12
    The Judgment of Jerusalem: Luke 13-24
    Continuation of the Mission by the Twelve: Acts 1-15
    The Witnessing of Paul and the Successful Advancement of the Mission: Acts 16-28
    Luke-Acts and the Importance of Genre to Interpretation
    Luke-Acts: An Epic Presentation of Christian Origins

    Appendix A: The Aeneid and Its Critical Interpreters
    Appendix B: The Dating of Valerius Flaccus's Argonautica
    Appendix C: Stefan Weinstock's Comparative Presentation of the Geographical Lists of Paulus Alexandrinus and Luke (Acts 2:9-11)

    Sources
    Works Consulted
    Index of Ancient Documents
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