An Aristophanic Contrast To Philippians 2.6–7

Publication Date

1999-01-01

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New Testament Studies can be accessed here.

Copyright © 1999 Cambridge University Press.

Abstract

Commentators often note that the emphasis in Phil 2.6–7 on Christ's selfless giving is quite contrary to pagan concepts of divinity. N. T. Wright, for example, writes that αρπαγμος, when construed as an abstract noun meaning ‘snatching’, ‘grasping’, or ‘getting’, ‘refers, intransitively, to a particular way of life, namely, that which characterized pagan rulers, and indeed pagan gods and goddesses such as the Philippians might have worshipped in their pre-Christian days’. Yet no commentator to my knowledge has referred to the excellent example of the grasping nature of pagan deities found in Aristophanes’ comedy the Ecclesiazusae (‘Women in Government’).

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Keywords

Philippians 2.6–71, pagan deities, Aristophanes, Ecclesiazusae

Citation

Young, N. H. (1999). An Aristophanic contrast to Philippians 2.6–7. New Testament Studies, 45(1), 153-155. doi:10.1017/S0028688598001532

International Standard Serial Number

0028-6885

International Standard Book Number