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Auteur Caroline Johnson Hodge |
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Married to an Unbeliever: Households, Hierarchies, and Holiness in 1 Corinthians 7:12–16 / Caroline Johnson Hodge in Harvard Theological Review, 103/1 (2010)
[article]
Titre : Married to an Unbeliever: Households, Hierarchies, and Holiness in 1 Corinthians 7:12–16 Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Caroline Johnson Hodge, Auteur Année de publication : 2010 Article en page(s) : pp. 1-25. Langues : Anglais (eng) Résumé : In his Advice to the Bride and Groom, Plutarch famously pronounces: “A married woman should therefore worship and recognize the gods whom her husband holds dear, and these alone. The door must be closed to strange cults and foreign superstitions. No god takes pleasure in cult performed furtively and in secret by a woman.” These comments represent a patriarchal ideology that the wife (along with the whole household) should follow the worship practices of the husband. It also suggests the possibility that this counsel was not always followed and that wives might bring their own gods into a marriage, attempting to maintain ritual practices in their honor, perhaps secretly.
in Harvard Theological Review > 103/1 (2010) . - pp. 1-25.[article] Married to an Unbeliever: Households, Hierarchies, and Holiness in 1 Corinthians 7:12–16 [texte imprimé] / Caroline Johnson Hodge, Auteur . - 2010 . - pp. 1-25.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Harvard Theological Review > 103/1 (2010) . - pp. 1-25.
Résumé : In his Advice to the Bride and Groom, Plutarch famously pronounces: “A married woman should therefore worship and recognize the gods whom her husband holds dear, and these alone. The door must be closed to strange cults and foreign superstitions. No god takes pleasure in cult performed furtively and in secret by a woman.” These comments represent a patriarchal ideology that the wife (along with the whole household) should follow the worship practices of the husband. It also suggests the possibility that this counsel was not always followed and that wives might bring their own gods into a marriage, attempting to maintain ritual practices in their honor, perhaps secretly.