Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- 1 Reading Acts in the second century: reflections on method, history, and desire
- 2 Jerusalem destroyed: the setting of Acts
- 3 Acts and the apostles: issues of leadership in the second century
- 4 Spec(tac)ular sights: mirroring in/of Acts
- 5 Acts of ascension: history, exaltation, and ideological legitimation
- 6 Time and space travel in Luke-Acts
- 7 The complexity of pairing: reading Acts 16 with Plutarch's Parallel Lives
- 8 Constructing Paul as a Christian in the Acts of the Apostles
- 9 Bold speech, opposition, and philosophical imagery in Acts
- 10 Among the apologists? Reading Acts with Justin Martyr
- 11 The Second Sophistic and the cultural idealization of Paul in Acts
- 12 Reading Luke-Acts in second-century Alexandria: from Clement to the Shadow of Apollos
- Bibliography
- Index of primary sources
- Index of authors
- Subject index
3 - Acts and the apostles: issues of leadership in the second century
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- 1 Reading Acts in the second century: reflections on method, history, and desire
- 2 Jerusalem destroyed: the setting of Acts
- 3 Acts and the apostles: issues of leadership in the second century
- 4 Spec(tac)ular sights: mirroring in/of Acts
- 5 Acts of ascension: history, exaltation, and ideological legitimation
- 6 Time and space travel in Luke-Acts
- 7 The complexity of pairing: reading Acts 16 with Plutarch's Parallel Lives
- 8 Constructing Paul as a Christian in the Acts of the Apostles
- 9 Bold speech, opposition, and philosophical imagery in Acts
- 10 Among the apologists? Reading Acts with Justin Martyr
- 11 The Second Sophistic and the cultural idealization of Paul in Acts
- 12 Reading Luke-Acts in second-century Alexandria: from Clement to the Shadow of Apollos
- Bibliography
- Index of primary sources
- Index of authors
- Subject index
Summary
However we conceive of the relationship between Paul and the author of Acts, problems abound. If it is thought that Acts was written by Paul's companion, Luke, we cannot avoid asking why someone who knew Paul well failed to mention that he wrote letters to communities of believers. If we think that Acts was written in the 80s of the first century, we then must deal with an author who wrote before the letter collection was known and was ignorant of a most fundamental fact about his hero. If we move the date of the composition of Acts into the second century, when the Pauline letters must have been available, we face the question of why they were ignored.
In an essay that dealt with questions of this sort, John Knox (1966) noted that, several decades earlier, Edgar Goodspeed (1933) had maintained that the relationship between Acts and the letters of Paul was one of cause and effect and that the publication of Acts had inspired the collecting of the letters. Knox also called attention to an essay written by Morton Enslin (1938), who, contrary to Goodspeed, maintained that the author of Acts both knew and made use of some of Paul's letters. Knox found Enslin's argument for the use of Paul's letters in Acts to be unproven, but he was impressed with what he called “the a priori case for Luke's knowledge of the letters” (Knox 1966: 282).
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- Information
- Engaging Early Christian HistoryReading Acts in the Second Century, pp. 45 - 58Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2013