رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Philo’s Eschatology, Personal and Cosmic "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 1075511
Doc. No : LA119140
Call No : ‭10.1163/15700631-15021258‬
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Ken M. Penner
Title & Author : Philo’s Eschatology, Personal and Cosmic [Article]\ Ken M. Penner
Publication Statement : Leiden: Brill
Title of Periodical : Journal for the Study of Judaism
Date : 2019
Volume/ Issue Number : 50/3
Page No : 383–402
Abstract : Although first-century writings in the New Testament, Dead Sea Scrolls, and the pseudepigrapha are widely recognized for their descriptions of the ultimate destiny of individuals and the world, the views of Philo of Alexandria do not get the same attention. To situate the apocalyptic eschatologies of Jesus, the Qumran sectarians, and Enoch in their context, we must compare them to the eschatology of this contemporary Hellenistic Jew. I demonstrate that Philo’s eschatology is shaped by two convictions: (1) that God is good and can do no evil, and (2) virtue must be developed within people in this life. These convictions entail that the purpose of punishment must be solely for correction, and that God provides unlimited opportunity for souls to improve. Philo held that reincarnation provides just such an ever-improving spiral in which souls finally become wise by honoring God and consequently the world becomes a peaceful, prosperous paradise. Although first-century writings in the New Testament, Dead Sea Scrolls, and the pseudepigrapha are widely recognized for their descriptions of the ultimate destiny of individuals and the world, the views of Philo of Alexandria do not get the same attention. To situate the apocalyptic eschatologies of Jesus, the Qumran sectarians, and Enoch in their context, we must compare them to the eschatology of this contemporary Hellenistic Jew. I demonstrate that Philo’s eschatology is shaped by two convictions: (1) that God is good and can do no evil, and (2) virtue must be developed within people in this life. These convictions entail that the purpose of punishment must be solely for correction, and that God provides unlimited opportunity for souls to improve. Philo held that reincarnation provides just such an ever-improving spiral in which souls finally become wise by honoring God and consequently the world becomes a peaceful, prosperous paradise.
Descriptor : eschatology
Descriptor : fate
Descriptor : paradise
Descriptor : Philo of Alexandria
Descriptor : punishment
Descriptor : reincarnation
Descriptor : resurrection
Descriptor : reward
Location & Call number : ‭10.1163/15700631-15021258‬
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10.1163-15700631-15021258_24148.pdf
10.1163-15700631-15021258.pdf
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