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Beyond Identification of the Topos of Household Management: Reading the Household Codes in Light of Recent Methodologies and Theoretical Perspectives in the Study of the New Testament*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2010
Abstract
From the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s New Testament scholars produced groundbreaking work illustrating that the household code had its origins in discussions of ‘household management’ among philosophers and moralists from Aristotle onward. Despite this general consensus, many points of disagreement remained, especially with respect to the function of the codes in particular New Testament documents and what the codes reveal about the relationship of Christians with the wider world. This article revisits some of the initial debates and traces their influence on subsequent scholarship. The recognition of the household codes as a type of ‘political’ discourse is of particular interest, as well as its impact on subsequent feminist, political and postcolonial interpretation. The conclusion suggests five promising directions, closely tied to the study of early Christian families, for future analysis of the codes leading to a more complete understanding of household management in a house-church setting.
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References
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7 Balch, ‘Household Codes’, 29–32.
8 See Perictione On Feminine Harmony 3; Plutarch Advice to Bride and Groom 140B. Adding to the complexity of the Pythagorean evidence is that the collection contains fragments and whole letters supposedly written by five philosopher women of illustrious background, including Perictione, Plato's mother. So the advice purports to be from woman to woman. There is substantial debate with respect to dating and whether there is any real influence of women's authorship. See Osiek, Carolyn and MacDonald, Margaret Y. (with Janet Tulloch), A Woman's Place: House Churches in Earliest Christianity (Philadelphia: Fortress, 2006) 22–3Google Scholar, 148–52.
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18 Harrill, Slaves in the New Testament, 85–7.
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36 Mary Rose D'Angelo, ‘Colossians’, Searching the Scriptures (ed. Fiorenza) 318. She speculates that the Christ-hymn in Col 1.15-20 may have originated as a hymn to Sophia with the end result of the transformation being that ‘the Christ of Colossians is the incarnation of a divine female persona, but his person hides hers with a male mask’.
37 D'Angelo, ‘Colossians’, 320.
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43 Fatum, ‘Christ Domesticated’, 193.
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59 See Scott, Domination and the Arts of Resistance. On the influence of Scott's work more generally on the study of Paul see Horsley, Richard A., ed., Hidden Transcripts and the Arts of Resistance: Applying the work of James C. Scott to Jesus and Paul (Semeia Studies 48; Atlanta, GA: SBL 2004)Google Scholar.
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63 Sumney, Colossians, 250. Here Sumney cites Müller, ‘Die Haustafel des Kolosserbriefes’, 274–5. Although in general I am somewhat less confident of Colossians’ internal consistency than is Sumney, I have argued that the author of Colossians does present a fundamental bestowal of honor on slaves. See MacDonald, Margaret Y., ‘Slavery, Sexuality, and House Churches: A Reassessment of Colossians 3.18–4.1 in Light of New Research on the Roman Family’, NTS 53 (2007) 94–113CrossRefGoogle Scholar, see esp. 108.
64 Horrell, 1 Peter, 94. On the application of Scott's perspective to the study of 1 Peter, see also Carter, Warren, ‘Going All the Way? Honoring the Emperor and Sacrificing Wives and Slaves in 1 Pet 2.13–3.6’, A Feminist Companion to the Catholic Epistles (ed. Levine, Amy Jill and Robbins, Maria Mayo; London/New York: T&T Clark, 2004) 14–33Google Scholar. On the use of postcolonial theory for the study of 1 Peter more generally, see Horrell, David G., ‘Between Conformity and Resistance: Beyond the Balch–Elliott Debate Towards a Postcolonial Reading of 1 Peter’, Reading 1 Peter with New Eyes: Methodological Reassessments of the Letter of First Peter (ed. Webb, Robert L. and Bauman-Martin, Betsy; LNTS; London/New York: T&T Clark, 2007) 111–43Google Scholar. On feminist postcolonial analysis of 1 Peter, see Fiorenza, The Power of the Word, 162–94.
65 On imperial ideology and Ephesians, see especially Faust, Eberhard, Pax Christi et Pax Caesaris: Religionsgeschichtliche, traditionsgeschichtliche und sozialgeschichtliche Studien zum Epheserbrief (NTOA 24; Göttingen: Vandenhoek & Ruprecht, 1993)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ubieta, Carmen Bernabé, ‘“Neither Xenoi nor paroikoi, sympolitai and oikeioi tou theou” (Eph 2.19): Pauline Christian Communities: Defining a New Territoriality,’ Social-Scientific Models for Interpreting the Bible (ed. Pilch, John J.; Leiden: Brill, 2001) 260–80Google Scholar; MacDonald, Margaret Y., ‘The Politics of Identity in Ephesians’, JSNT 26 (2004) 419–44Google Scholar.
66 See MacDonald, ‘The Politics of Identity in Ephesians’. See also Osiek and MacDonald (with Tulloch), A Woman's Place, 127–9.
67 Kartzow, Gossip and Gender, 33.
68 See Osiek and MacDonald (with Tulloch), A Woman's Place, 91.
69 Streete, Gail Corrington, ‘Askesis in the Pastoral Epistles’, Asceticism and the New Testament (ed. Vaage, Leif E. and Wimbush, Vincent L.; New York: Routledge, 1999)Google Scholar 313.
70 Saller, Richard P., ‘Household and Gender’, The Cambridge Economic History of the Greco-Roman World (ed. Scheidel, Walter, Morris, Ian, and Saller, Richard; Cambridge: Cambridge University, 2007)Google Scholar 89.
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72 See Glancy, Jennifer A., Slavery in Early Christianity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002)CrossRefGoogle Scholar 149. On the household codes and strategies of slave management, it is also valuable to consider the scholarship of J. Albert Harrill cited above.
73 See my more detailed response to both Glancy and Harrill in ‘Slavery, Sexuality and House Churches’.
74 See, for example, Moore, Stephen D., New Testament Masculinities (Semeia Studies 45; Atlanta, GA: Society of Biblical Literature, 2003)Google Scholar; Osiek and MacDonald (with Tulloch), A Woman's Place, 132–6, citing Williams, Craig A., Roman Homosexuality: Ideologies of Masculinity in Roman Antiquity (Oxford: Oxford University, 1999)Google Scholar.
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76 See Martin, Dale B., ‘Slave Families and Slaves in Families’, Early Christian Families in Context: An Interdisciplinary Dialogue (ed. Balch, David L. and Osiek, Carolyn; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003) 207–30Google Scholar. See also MacDonald, ‘Slavery, Sexuality and House Churches’, 103–4.
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78 Notable exceptions include: Müller, Peter, In der Mitte der Gemeinde: Kinder im Neuen Testament (Neukirchen–Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag, 1992) 326–48Google Scholar; Balla, Peter, The Child–Parent Relationship in the New Testament and its Environment (WUNT 155; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2003) 165–78Google Scholar; See also now MacDonald, Margaret Y., ‘A Place of Belonging: Perspectives on Children from Colossians and Ephesians’, The Child in the Bible (ed. Bunge, Marcia J.; Grand Rapids, MI: Eeerdmans, 2008) 278–304Google Scholar.
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80 See n. 78.
81 See Meeks, The First Urban Christians, 81–4.
82 The question of whether a child should be educated at home or sent out to school was debated in antiquity, especially in relation to the effect of the choice on the child's morality. See for example, Quintilian The Orator's Education 1.2. For further discussion see Osiek and MacDonald (with Tulloch), A Woman's Place, 85–90.
83 See, for example, Walsh and Keesmaat, Colossians Remixed.
84 See, for example, Horrell, 1 Peter, 94; Maier, ‘A Sly Civility’.
85 Bhabha, The Location of Culture, 207.
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