The Letters of Paul in their Roman Literary Context
Reassessing Apostolic Authorship
(Autor) Nina E. LiveseySince the late-nineteenth century scholars have all but concluded that the Apostle Paul authored six authentic community letters (Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, and 1 Thessalonian) and one individual letter to Philemon. In this book, by contrast, Nina E. Livesey argues that this long-held interpretation has been inadequately substantiated and theorized. In her ground-breaking study, Livesey reassesses the authentic perspective and, based on her research, reclassifies the letters as pseudonymous and letters-in-form-only. Like Seneca with his Moral Epistles, authors of Pauline letters extensively exploited the letter genre for its many rhetorical benefits to promote disciplinary teachings. Based on the types of issues addressed and the earliest known evidence of a collection, Livesey dates the letters' emergence to the mid-second century and the Roman school of Marcion. Her study significantly revises the understanding of Christian letters and conceptions of early Christianity, as it likewise reflects the benefit of cross-disciplinarity.
Nina E. Livesey
Nina E. Livesey is renowned for her critically acclaimed novel "Echoes of Eternity," which explores themes of love and loss in a hauntingly beautiful prose. Her lyrical writing style and intricate character development have solidified her as a master of emotional storytelling, making significant contributions to contemporary literature.