tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3931921496989071942.post4422358353634328306..comments2023-06-08T07:32:39.725-05:00Comments on Aristotle's Feminist Subject: Two Cultural Sources of Paul's "Sarx"J. K. Gaylehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07600312868663460988noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3931921496989071942.post-84222638752688659662009-11-10T17:01:48.212-06:002009-11-10T17:01:48.212-06:00I would be very interested to hear how Hebrew cont...<i>I would be very interested to hear how </i>Hebrew<i> contemporaries of Paul used the word sarx.</i><br /><br />There are plenty of Jewish writers and translators of the New Testament who are Paul's contemporaries. I've posted today on a novel that seems to have existed when Paul was alive. So please just suggest a text and an author, and we'll look.J. K. Gaylehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07600312868663460988noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3931921496989071942.post-29553827262320189822009-11-08T21:18:28.789-06:002009-11-08T21:18:28.789-06:00I would be very interested to hear how Hebrew cont...I would be very interested to hear how <i>Hebrew</i> contemporaries of Paul used the word sarx. Paul was extremely well-versed in rhetoric and Greek literature, certainly -- though the exact contents of his bookshelf beyond the LXX (and likely Philo) are a matter of fanciful speculation -- but the use of sarx in the more immediate context of Judaism would be fascinating. Would you mind giving a little attention there soon, as well? I'd appreciate it!Garyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01350640852962668641noreply@blogger.com