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Brian McNeil

  • When Children Became People

    $34.00

    1.Introduction
    2.Children In The Greco-Roman World
    3.Patristic Teaching About The Nature Of Children And Their Characteristics
    4.Abortion, Infanticide And Expositio, And Sexual Relations Between Children And Adults
    5.Making “athletes Of Christ”: Upbringing And Education Of Children
    6.Children’s Participation In Worship
    7.Children And A Life Of Religious Perfection
    8.Early Christians And The Humanity Of Children

    Additional Info
    Bakke paints a fascinating picture of children’s first real emergence as people against a backdrop of the ancient world.

    Using theological and social history research, Bakke compares Greco-Roman and Christian attitudes toward abortion and child prostitution, pedagogy and moral upbringing, and the involvement of children in liturgy and church life. He also assesses Christian attitudes toward children in the church’s developing doctrinal commitments.

    Today, growing numbers of children are impoverished, exploited, abandoned, orphaned, or killed. Bakke’s insightful work begins to untangle the roots of their complex plight.

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  • Magic And Paganism In Early Christianity

    $16.00

    Klauck describes the religious world into which Christianity was born, by looking at it from the many experiences of the first Christians as recorded in Acts. You will journey with Peter as he encounters Simon the magician, the people of Lystra want to offer sacrifices to Paul and Barnabas, and a soothsaying slave-girl is the occasion for conflict in Philippi. Your travels continue with Paul to Athens and find a city full of idols but also discovers an altar “to an unknown god” where Paul then delivers the famous Areopagus speech. In Ephesus, where some are burning their books of magic formulae, while others are provoking a riot in the name of Artemis.
    Hans-Josef Klauck is Professor of New Testament and Early Christian Literature at the University of Chicago. He has published commentaries and monographs on 1 Corinthians, the Johannine epistles, New Testament theology, noncanonical gospels, and the history of religion in the Graeco-Roman world.

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