Representations of the Afterlife in Luke-Acts
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:23rd Aug '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Somov shows that the variety of views and religious metaphors which deal with the afterlife in Luke-Acts can be seen to have an internal coherence in Luke's conceptual system.
Questions regarding the afterlife are many, and the Gospel of Luke and the book of Acts pay a great deal of attention to them: why does Luke speak about several different forms of the afterlife? Why is resurrection described as a person's transformation into an angelic being? How many abodes are appointed for the righteous and the wicked after death? Alexey Somov addresses these queries in relation to the apparent confusion and variety found in the text, and in respect of the interrelatedness of these issues, and their connection with other eschatological issues in Luke-Acts, and in relation to the wider cultural context of the Mediterranean world to which Luke belonged. Every culture expresses its beliefs by means of special metaphors that allow it to comprehend supernatural realities in terms of everyday experience. Belief in the afterlife was part of this metaphorical system which Luke shared with the ancient eastern Mediterranean culture. Somov takes his analysis one step further by applying Cognitive Metaphor Theory to selected metaphorical aspects of the afterlife. While the inconsistencies and incoherence of the combined metaphors may seem jarring to a contemporary Western reader, Somov's reading enables a recognition of the specific religious metaphors used, which for Luke would have been current and widely accepted.
In this extensive and informative book, Somov provides what is currently the most thorough treatment of Luke’s presentation of the afterlife ... This book is well-written, interacts with the latest critical scholarship in the field, while avoiding simplistic solutions. Thus, it marks perhaps one of the more important contributions to the study of Luke-Acts so far in the current century. * Religious Studies Review *
Alexey Somov has produced a carefully written investigation of the notion of the afterlife, specifically in Luke-Acts, but he also advances our understanding of this complex issue among Jews, Greeks, Egyptians, and Romans in the first centuries BCE and CE. His research draws helpfully on the most important ancient sources, beyond the usual listing of sources, and shows considerable awareness of the most informed and up-to-date secondary literature as well. The arguments and interpretations of ancient texts are presented with clarity, balance and fairness. This volume is helpful in understanding both biblical and and non-biblical notions of life after death and it will likely become a standard resource for all subsequent research in this important subject. I highly recommend this volume. * Lee Martin McDonald, Acadia University, Canada *
ISBN: 9780567683847
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 404g
256 pages