大房子:约翰福音14:1-7是对罗马帝国暴力的回应

IF 0.1 N/A RELIGION Review & Expositor Pub Date : 2023-09-29 DOI:10.1177/00346373231195387
Arthur M. Wright
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在古代,整个罗马帝国本身被想象成一个家庭,其中的居民对他们象征性的父亲——皇帝——忠心耿耿。约翰福音14章1到7节的语言和文学背景表明,这与帝国概念化的方式有重要的相互作用。第四部福音书以家庭形象模仿了帝国的结构,其中上帝代替了“父亲”,信徒则是“孩子”。因此,信徒群体被想象成凯撒帝国的另一个家庭,有自己独特的价值观和优先事项。在这篇文章中,我认为约翰的信徒通过把自己想象成一个生活在帝国暴力威胁下的另类家庭来参与帝国谈判。传统的对约翰福音14章的解释将“我父的家”等同于“天堂”,这暗示了一种逃避现实的策略,即信徒有一天会被安全地从他们的帝国背景中解脱出来,而这种解释暗示了一种更微妙的策略,即从内部与帝国权力进行谈判。神对帝国暴力威胁的回应是建立一个神所爱的家。
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A big, big house(hold): John 14:1–7 as a response to Roman imperial violence
In antiquity, the entire Roman Empire itself was imagined as a household, with its inhabitants obedient children to their symbolic father, the emperor. The language and the literary context of John 14:1–7 suggest significant interplay with this way of conceptualizing the empire. The Fourth Gospel imitates imperial structures with its household imagery, in which God takes the place of “Father” and believers as “children.” The community of believers is thus imagined as an alternative household to Caesar’s empire, one with its own unique values and priorities. In this article, I suggest that Johannine believers are engaged in imperial negotiation by imagining themselves as an alternative household living under threat of imperial violence. Whereas traditional interpretations of John 14 that equate “my Father’s house” with “heaven” suggest an escapist strategy, in which believers will one day be whisked safely out of their imperial context, this interpretation suggests a more nuanced strategy of negotiating imperial power from within. The divine response to the threat of imperial violence is to establish a beloved household of God.
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Review & Expositor
Review & Expositor RELIGION-
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