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Hellenistic Preconceptions of Shipwreck and Pollution as a Context for Acts 27–28
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2011
Extract
In a recent analysis of Acts 27–28, Miles and Trompf have emphasized the strategic position of these sections in the text and their value as a kind of witness for Lukan theology. Luke's statement that “everyone escaped to land” after the shipwreck (27:44), they argue, is in fact a “long-forgotten theological punch line.” To an ancient reader, the assertion that all escaped with their lives would, they contend, be prima facie evidence of Paul's innocence. Drawing on pagan concepts of divine retribution, pollution, and shipwreck, they attempt to reconstruct the attitude of this reader on his first encounter with these passages. If Paul had been guilty, such a reader, according to their reconstruction, would have believed that his pollution should have resulted in death for himself and/or fellow passengers. The fact that no one died, however, would amount to “decisive confirmation of Paul's innocence.” There was no need, therefore, to relate the outcome of Paul's appeal to Caesar since he had already been put to the test “by forces and exigencies far more dreaded than the requirements of a human law court.”
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References
1 Miles, G. B. and Trompf, G., “Luke and Antiphon: The Theology of Acts 27–28 in the Light of Pagan Beliefs about Divine Retribution, Pollution, and Shipwreck,” HTR 69 (1976) 259–67; hereafter cited as Miles-Trompf.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 Ibid., 264.
3 Ibid.
4 Ibid., 265.
5 Miles-Trompf, apparently following the speech's argumentum, refer to the defendant as Helos. This is an old mistake, the result of a false reading in section 19 of the oration which was incorporated into its later argumentum. For the correct name, Euxitheus, cf. Sopater,apud Rhet. Graeci (ed. Walz) 4. 316.
6 For an introduction to the case and the legalities involved, see MacDowell, D., Andocides: On the Mysteries (Oxford, 1962) 1–18. The decree of Isotimides prohibited all who were guilty of impiety and had confessed it from entering Athenian temples and the agora.Google Scholar
7 For introduction, text, and translation, see W. R. M. Lamb, Lysias (LCl) 112–43. The extant version may also represent a pamphlet composed by the prosecution after Andocides had published his defense. In that case the arguments were meant to persuade not merely the court but Athenians in general.
8 Translation according to K. J. Maidment, Minor Attic Orators I (LCL). So also sections 137–39 below. All other translations, unless otherwise indicated, are mine.
9 Cf. Miles-Trompf, “Luke and Antiphon,” 267.
10 On this oft-recurring theme in Plutarch, see Brenk, F. E., In Mist Apparelled, Religious Themes in Plutarch's Moralia and Lives (Leiden: Brill, 1977) 256–75.Google Scholar
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12 For discussion of this type of argument, as well as the views of Plato and Aristotle, see Bonner, R. J., Lawyers and Litigants in Ancient Athens (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1927) 226–28.Google Scholar
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15 Horace Odes 3.2.26–30.
16 Virgil Aeneid 1.39–45.
17 Ovid Heroides 7.57–58.
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21 Statius Thebais 8.269–70.
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32 Statius Silvae 1.1.55.
33 Harris, Cult of the Twins, 50.
34 Cf. Ibid., 52 on the restoration of sight to the butcher Severus, a portent associated with Ambrose's canonization of the twins in Milan. That portent, in turn, was associated with the driving back of the Arians. On Harris' comparison of the Dioskouroi to the Vedic Acvins in this role of blinding and restoring sight, see also Dumezil, G., Les dieux des indo-europeénnes (Paris, 1952) 13–14; Schilling, “Les Castores romaines,” 187.Google Scholar
35 On the Dioskouroi as healers, see Harris, Cult of the Twins, 50–54; Bethe, “Dioskuren,” 1097.
36 For one view on the historicity of the Lystran episode, see O'Neill, J. C., The Theology of Acts in Its Historical Setting (2d ed.; London: SPCK, 1970) 144.Google Scholar
37 Thiel, Epist. pontif. Rom., 1.603.
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39 Thus cutting the well-known Dibelian knot at 28:6: Dibelius, M., Studies in the Acts of the Apostles (New York: Scribners, 1951) 214Google Scholar. For a like interpretation cf. Miles-Trompf, “Luke and Antiphon,” 266, n. 24. While the Maltese themselves may have been civilized, to simply translate barbaroi as “natives” is not justified by the context. Like the shipwreck from which all escape as well as the ineffectual snakebite, the barbaroi who show “unusual” hospitality instead of serving as instruments of divine retribution serve rather as one more proof of Paul's innocence. Andocides 137–39, cited above, is an illuminating parallel in context here.
40 For a recent discussion of the snake incident in relation to the topos of miraculous display of power over the animal world, see the dissertation under the direction of Betz, Hans Dieter, Kanda, S. H., “The Form and Function of the Petrine and Pauline Miracle Stories in the Acts of the Apostles” (Diss., Claremont, 1974) 288–303.Google Scholar
41 For discussion of the word κωλύτως in relation to Lukan apologetics, cf. Haencher, E., The Acts of the Apostles-A Commentary (Oxford, 1971) 731–32.Google Scholar
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