Eprint Objects

Eprint 219

eprintid 219
rev_number 5
eprint_status archive
userid 368
dir 00/00/00/02/19
datestamp 2010-04-22 15:26:58
lastmod 2010-04-22 15:26:58
status_changed 2010-04-22 15:26:58
type thesis
metadata_visibility show
item_issues_count 0
creators BLACKWELL, BENJAMIN,CAREY
title Christosis: Pauline Soteriology in Light of Deification in Irenaeus and Cyril of Alexandria
full_text_status public
keywords christosis, theosis, deification, Paul, soteriology, immortality, incorruption, adoption
abstract The aim of this thesis is to explore whether and to what extent theosis helpfully captures Paul's presentation of the anthropological dimension of soteriology. Drawing methodologically from Gadamer, Jauss, and Bakhtin, we attempt to hold a conversation between Paul and two of his later interpreters--Irenaeus and Cyril of Alexandria--in order to see what light the development of deification in these later writers shines on the Pauline texts themselves. In Part 1 of the thesis, we analyse how Irenaeus and Cyril develop their notions of deification and how they use Pauline texts in support of their conclusions. Drawing from Ps 82 both writers ascribe to believers the appellation of 'gods', and they associate this primarily with Pauline texts that speak of the experience of immortality, sanctification, and being sons of God. As believers experience this deifying move the image and likeness of God is restored through a participatory relationship with God mediated by Christ and the Spirit. In Part 2 we then analyse the anthropological dimension of Paul's soteriology in Rom 8 and 2 Cor 3-5, with excursus on Gal 3-4, 1 Cor 15, and Phil 2-3. In the context of believers' restored divine-human relationship through Christ and the Spirit, Paul speaks of believers being conformed to the narrative of Christ's death and life, which culminates in an experience of divine and heavenly glory and immortality. In Part 3 we offer a comparison of patristic views of deification and Paul's soteriology. While differences are clear, we conclude that Paul's soteriology overlaps significantly with that of these two later interpreters, such that deification is an apt description of the anthropological dimension of his soteriology. At the same time, christosis is probably a better term in today's context to capture his distinct emphasis on embodying Christ's death and life.
date 2010
institution Durham University
thesis_type Doctoral
thesis_qualification_name PhD
department_dur
DDD32
documents
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/219/1/BCB_Christosis_Thesis_-_Final.pdf (1832853 bytes)