Emotion Made Right
eBook - PDF

Emotion Made Right

Hellenistic Moral Progress and the (Un)Emotional Jesus in Mark

  1. 279 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Emotion Made Right

Hellenistic Moral Progress and the (Un)Emotional Jesus in Mark

About this book

Prominent Hellenistic moralists from ca. the first century CE warn that all emotions carry temptation(s) to sin or error. To be guilty of emotional sin is to allow psychosomatic feelings (or rising emotion) free reign to trump godly (rational) guidance of behavioral pursuits. Thus, morally minded Hellenists widely view unemotional behavior as a sign of moral progress. Emotive language peppers the Markan narrative, inviting moral assessments, yet scholarship has seldom delved into a historical-literary analysis of Jesus's emotional characterization. This study proposes a working definition of emotion apropos the narratival nature of Hellenistic emotion theory. It finds that Jesus consistently vanquishes emotional temptations with "battle" techniques similar to those championed by the moralists. Mark characterizes Jesus in the moral tradition of the anti-emotional exemplar, and several minor characters are liberated from destructive emotions through the mercy of Jesus's godly rationale. By recognizing the Markan Jesus as a model, this study outlines a method for persevering in emotional testing that modern readers might also emulate to resist temptation with divine help.

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Yes, you can access Emotion Made Right by Richard James Hicks in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Biblical Studies. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
De Gruyter
Year
2021
Print ISBN
9783110723045
eBook ISBN
9783110723076

Table of contents

  1. Contents
  2. Abbreviations
  3. Chapter 1: Introduction
  4. Chapter 2: A Methodological Proposal for Discussing Emotion in a First-Century CE Milieu
  5. Chapter 3: Emotional Temptation, Disbelief, and Anti-emotional Repentance in Mark: The “Good News” of the Kingdom as Divine-Rational Empowerment
  6. Chapter 4: Mark’s “(Un)Emotional” Jesus: “He Saved Others; Himself He Cannot Save[?]” (Mark 15:31)
  7. Chapter 5: Conclusions and Implications
  8. Bibliography
  9. Subject Index
  10. Ancient Sources Index
  11. Modern Authors Index