Home Religion, Bible and Theology “Today or Tomorrow We Will Go to Such and Such a City” (Jas 4:13): The Experience of Interconnectivity and the Mobility of Norms in the Ancient Globalized World
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

“Today or Tomorrow We Will Go to Such and Such a City” (Jas 4:13): The Experience of Interconnectivity and the Mobility of Norms in the Ancient Globalized World

  • Susanne Luther
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

The ethics of speech is a central aspect of ancient ethics. The New Testament writings engage in this ancient discourse by receiving and creatively adapting speech-ethical norms and values from the ancient Jewish and Greco-Roman contexts as well as by introducing their individual positions back into the ancient discourse. This flow of early Christian norms and notions between regions and cultures in the Roman Empire has been examined from a tradition-historical perspective. This contribution explores the issues from the perspective of globalization studies in order to gain new insights into the interconnectivity of the networks that enabled the mobility of norms and the emergence of common traditional milieus based on the ancient perception of a “globalized world.”

Abstract

The ethics of speech is a central aspect of ancient ethics. The New Testament writings engage in this ancient discourse by receiving and creatively adapting speech-ethical norms and values from the ancient Jewish and Greco-Roman contexts as well as by introducing their individual positions back into the ancient discourse. This flow of early Christian norms and notions between regions and cultures in the Roman Empire has been examined from a tradition-historical perspective. This contribution explores the issues from the perspective of globalization studies in order to gain new insights into the interconnectivity of the networks that enabled the mobility of norms and the emergence of common traditional milieus based on the ancient perception of a “globalized world.”

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. List of Contributors VII
  4. Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Travel Experiences 1
  5. “And as They Travelled Eastward” (Gen 11:2): Travel in the Book of Genesis and the Anonymous Travelers in the Tower of Babel Account 11
  6. The Consolations of Travel: Reading Seneca’s Ad Marciam vis-à-vis Paul of Tarsus 33
  7. The (Missing) Motif of “Returning Home” from an Otherworldly Journey in Menippean Literature and the New Testament 55
  8. The Educational Aspect of the Lukan Travel Narrative: Jesus as a Πεπαιδευμένος 73
  9. Acts of the Apostles—A Celebration of Uncertainty? Constructing a Dialogical Self for the Early Jesus Movement 97
  10. “Today or Tomorrow We Will Go to Such and Such a City” (Jas 4:13): The Experience of Interconnectivity and the Mobility of Norms in the Ancient Globalized World 113
  11. Heavenly Journey and Divine Epistemology in the Fourth Gospel 145
  12. Following Vespasian in His Footsteps: Movement and (E)motion Management in Josephus’ Judean War 161
  13. Religion on the Road—Nehalennia Revisited: Voyagers Addressing a North Sea Deity in the Second Century CE 181
  14. Mapping Cosmological Space in the Apocalypse of Paul and the Visio Pauli: The Actualization of Virtual Spatiality in Two Pauline Apocalyptical Journeys based on 2 Cor 12:2–4 189
  15. The Travels of Barnabas: From the Acts of the Apostles to Late Antique Hagiographic Literature 229
  16. Rabbinic Geography: Between the Imaginary and Real 251
  17. The Journey of Zayd Ibn ʿAmr: In Search of True Worship 269
  18. Nautical Fiction of Late Antiquity: Jews and Christians Traveling by Sea 295
  19. Monasteries as Travel Loci for Muslims and Christians (500–1000 CE) 313
  20. Sachregister 337
  21. Stellenregister 341
Downloaded on 22.11.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110717488-007/html
Scroll to top button