Atsiliepimai
Aprašymas
Daniel Maier offers a comprehensive re-examination of the
Apocalypse of Peter
, one of the earliest Christian apocalyptic texts, and reconstructs its vision of the fate of the righteous after death. He argues that this text articulates an elaborate and influential model of Paradise as a return to a heavenly Eden, rather than as an abstract or purely spiritualized state. This model is neither marginal nor secondary but belongs to a formative phase of early Christian eschatological imagination. The author combines detailed philological analysis with source/redaction criticism and tradition-historical comparison. He examines all extant textual witnesses, with particular attention to the Ethiopic transmission and its embedding within a Pseudo-Clementine framework. By reading the Ethiopic material not as a late or secondary accretion but as a decisive witness to early interpretive trajectories, the author challenges long-standing reconstructions that grant one version near-exclusive authority in establishing the text.
The
Apocalypse of Peter
, Maier argues, envisions the post-mortem destinies of both the righteous and the sinners in terms of spatial concreteness, sensory experience, and communal forms of existence. Paradise is depicted as a restored Eden characterized by light, fragrance, and abundant joy, thereby integrating Jewish apocalyptic traditions of Eden, resurrection, and judgment with emerging Christian eschatology. Maier further demonstrates that motifs such as post-mortem salvation, otherworldly mediation by angels and patriarchs, and embodied perception are structurally linked to broader early Christian debates about resurrection, justice, and divine mercy.
Daniel Maier offers a comprehensive re-examination of the
Apocalypse of Peter
, one of the earliest Christian apocalyptic texts, and reconstructs its vision of the fate of the righteous after death. He argues that this text articulates an elaborate and influential model of Paradise as a return to a heavenly Eden, rather than as an abstract or purely spiritualized state. This model is neither marginal nor secondary but belongs to a formative phase of early Christian eschatological imagination. The author combines detailed philological analysis with source/redaction criticism and tradition-historical comparison. He examines all extant textual witnesses, with particular attention to the Ethiopic transmission and its embedding within a Pseudo-Clementine framework. By reading the Ethiopic material not as a late or secondary accretion but as a decisive witness to early interpretive trajectories, the author challenges long-standing reconstructions that grant one version near-exclusive authority in establishing the text.
The
Apocalypse of Peter
, Maier argues, envisions the post-mortem destinies of both the righteous and the sinners in terms of spatial concreteness, sensory experience, and communal forms of existence. Paradise is depicted as a restored Eden characterized by light, fragrance, and abundant joy, thereby integrating Jewish apocalyptic traditions of Eden, resurrection, and judgment with emerging Christian eschatology. Maier further demonstrates that motifs such as post-mortem salvation, otherworldly mediation by angels and patriarchs, and embodied perception are structurally linked to broader early Christian debates about resurrection, justice, and divine mercy.
Atsiliepimai