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On Earth As in HeavenOn Earth As in Heaven

On Earth As in Heaven

Clark

About this book

Convinced that our access to the original sense of Jesus's prayer must be mediated by its history of "effects," David Clark seeks to trace the meaning of one of Christianity's most repeated, and thus most "effective" texts through the early centuries of the faith. Clark begins by arguing that the prayer's original context was in a revival of Jewish prayer, then sets it in the literary context of Gospels that, he argues, represented Jesus as recapitulating Israel's testing in the wilderness in his own temptation. He then traces the prayer's meaning within the narratives of Matthew and Luke and in the Didache, then examines the first full commentary on the prayer, that of Tertullian in the third century CE. Clark attends to the evolution of ideas and themes embodied in the prayer and of the understanding of prayer itself across epic transitions, from Judaism to the teaching of Jesus, from Jesus to the Gospels, and from the Gospels to earliest self-consciously "catholic" Christianity. This is an engaging narrative of the history behind and reception of the Lord's Prayer; it illustrates how a text's reception may help us explore and understand the multivalent meaning of the text itself.

Details

OL Work ID
OL25742085W

Subjects

Lord's prayerCriticism, interpretationChristianity and justicePrayerSpiritual lifeMennonite authorsJusticeAspect religieuxChristianismePrièreVie spirituelleAuteurs mennonitesRELIGIONChristian ChurchHistoryJudaism

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