富裕贫穷:哥林多后书8.1-15以及贫穷和财富的社会意义

Pub Date : 2023-07-01 DOI:10.1017/S002868852200039X
J. Barclay
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这篇文章最初是在2022年在鲁文举行的SNTS会议上发表的总统演讲,探讨了保罗配置捐赠和“财富”的方式,无论是与马其顿人和哥林多人(作为耶路撒冷收藏的贡献者)还是与基督的关系。根据阿特米多罗斯的梦境解释,它说明了“财富”在古代是如何被理解为一种表现而不是占有:一个人的富有在于给予,而不是(或不仅仅是)拥有。从这个角度来看,保罗提供了一个引人注目的马其顿人的形象,他们在贫穷中是“富有的”,他们毫无保留地致力于收集,通过获得给予的尊严来实现穷人的梦想。哥林多后书8.9的基督性陈述也可以用一种新的方式来理解(和整合):基督是在他的财富(自我分享)中变得贫穷(在十字架的软弱中),所以哥林多信徒,参与这种动力,可能会在基督的自我奉献中变得“富有”。虽然恩典和金钱不是完全相同的,但它们也不是不相关的“经济”:基督事件的恩典把它的受益者变成了施与者,在多种形式的慷慨中富有,包括物质上的礼物。因此,本文证明了在物质领域中运作的社会关系的非竞争模式的原则,具有激发对非人性化的资本主义形式的神学挑战的能力。
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Rich Poverty: 2 Corinthians 8.1–15 and the Social Meaning of Poverty and Wealth
Abstract This article, originally presented as the Presidential Address at the 2022 SNTS Meeting in Leuven, explores the ways in which Paul configures giving and ‘wealth’, both in relation to the Macedonians and Corinthians (as contributors to the Jerusalem collection) and in relation to Christ. Drawing on the dream-interpretations of Artemidorus, it illustrates how ‘wealth’ could be understood in antiquity as performance rather than possession: one is wealthy in giving and not (or not only) in having. In this light, Paul offers a striking image of the Macedonians who in their poverty were ‘rich’ in their unreserved commitment to the collection, fulfilling the dream of the poor by acquiring the dignity of giving. The Christological statement of 2 Cor 8.9 can also be understood (and integrated) in a new way: it was in his wealth (of self-sharing) that Christ became poor (in the weakness of the cross), so that the Corinthians, participating in this momentum, might become ‘rich’ in the same self-giving of Christ. Although grace and money are not identical, neither are they unrelated ‘economies’: the grace of the Christ-event transforms its beneficiaries into givers, rich in multiple forms of generosity, including material gift. The text thus evidences principles of a non-competitive mode of social relations operative in the material sphere, with the capacity to stimulate a theological challenge to dehumanising forms of capitalism.
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