An Ecstasy of Folly: Prophecy and Authority in Early Christianity (Harvard Theological Studies)
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Manufacturer: Harvard Divinity School
EAN (European Article Number): 9780674012288
Number of Items: 1
Binding: Paperback
Author: Laura Salah Nasrallah
Publisher: Harvard Divinity School
Dewey Decimal Number: 231.74509015
Publication Date: 2004-03-01
Reading Level: 240
Description:
Who is a true prophet? Who has real access to divine realms of knowledge? Early Christian communities accused each other's prophets of madness and of making false claims to divine knowledge. This book argues that early Christians did not seek to answer questions about true prophecy or to define madness and rationality, but rather used this discourse in order to control knowledge, to establish their own authority, and to define Christian identity. Christians launched these arguments in the context of the Greco-Roman world, where prophecy, visions, ecstasy, and dreams--all considered part of the same phenomenon--were the subject of cutting-edge philosophical, medical, and even political debates.
Early Christian prophecy has usually been interpreted according to a model which explains that at its origins, Christianity was characterized by vibrant spiritual gifts which declined as church order and institutions developed. Arguing that a model of struggle informed by feminist theory and postcolonial criticism provides a better framework for understanding early Christian texts, this work clarifies how early Christian arguments about rationality, madness, and the role of spiritual gifts in history are attempts to negotiate authority and to define religious identity in the midst of many competing forms of Christianity. Laura Nasrallah uses New Testament and early third-century texts to trace the rhetoric of this debate--rhetoric that is still alive today as communities across the globe struggle to define religious identity.
Customer Reviews
Review Summary: Rhetorical battle over dissociative-state authority
Date: 2005-01-09
Details: A study of the polemical and politically motivated nature of mentions of 'ecstasy' and 'madness', 'inspiration' and 'delusion', 'elevated sobriety' and 'drunkenness' in early Christian writings.
Historical researchers need to recognize and account for this polemical nature of the texts and the political nature of claims to having access to the dissociative cognitive state, whether held divine or demonic. In the polemical, even farcically polemicized battle of pens and spins, a writer's own group's access to the dissociative state of cognition was portrayed as divinely Spirit-filled inspiration and enlightened transcendent wisdom, while the dissociative state as accessed by one's opponents was, as a matter of course, portrayed as demon-possessed madness, folly, and delusion.