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Jesus and the Poor

Brian Capper

Paperback 2007-09-01

Publisher Description

Jesus and the Poor sharpens readers' perceptions of Jesus' concern for the poor by setting his teaching within an accurate and vividly described account of the harsh economic relations of his world. Typical ancient economic problems, including the limited diet of the peasant/artisan mass, peasant debt, the harsh lives of day-labourers, frequent resort of poor women to prostitution, and the luxurious indulgence of the elite, are illustrated from Biblical, Intertestamental and other materials. This socio-economic 'map' enables the student and general reader to understand Jesus' sharp critique of wealth and to interpret many particular features of his teaching. For example, the poor diet of many in his world explains the intensity of Jesus' concern for the poor, his hostility to any self-indulgent rich who ignore the plight of 'Lazarus' at their gate, storing food while others experience hunger, his reference to the sale of sparrows in the market-place (for food, as a source of protein) and his instruction to pray for a daily ration of bread (obtaining even this was a struggle for many). Jesus is proven both a sharp critic of exploitative economic relations and a proponent of an ideal of sharing which was determinative for early Christianity and ultimately revised the ethic of antiquity through the charitable practice and teaching of the Church. The contemporary relevance of Jesus' teaching is shown through a concluding analogy drawn between the exploitation of the poor by the rich in antiquity and relations between the developing and developed world today.

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Publisher Description

Jesus and the Poor sharpens readers' perceptions of Jesus' concern for the poor by setting his teaching within an accurate and vividly described account of the harsh economic relations of his world. Typical ancient economic problems, including the limited diet of the peasant/artisan mass, peasant debt, the harsh lives of day-labourers, frequent resort of poor women to prostitution, and the luxurious indulgence of the elite, are illustrated from Biblical, Intertestamental and other materials. This socio-economic 'map' enables the student and general reader to understand Jesus' sharp critique of wealth and to interpret many particular features of his teaching. For example, the poor diet of many in his world explains the intensity of Jesus' concern for the poor, his hostility to any self-indulgent rich who ignore the plight of 'Lazarus' at their gate, storing food while others experience hunger, his reference to the sale of sparrows in the market-place (for food, as a source of protein) and his instruction to pray for a daily ration of bread (obtaining even this was a struggle for many). Jesus is proven both a sharp critic of exploitative economic relations and a proponent of an ideal of sharing which was determinative for early Christianity and ultimately revised the ethic of antiquity through the charitable practice and teaching of the Church. The contemporary relevance of Jesus' teaching is shown through a concluding analogy drawn between the exploitation of the poor by the rich in antiquity and relations between the developing and developed world today.

Koorong Code277116
ISBN0567030873
EAN9780567030870
Pages272
DepartmentAcademic
CategoryBiblical Studies
PublisherBloomsbury Continuum Publishing Group
Publication DateSep 2007
Dimensions28 x 152 x 228mm
Weight0.503kg