Publication Date
2017
Publication Details
Litwa, D. (2017). Paul the “god” in Acts 28: A comparison with Philoctetes. Journal of Biblical Literature,136(3), A. Reinhartz. 707-726.: Society of Biblical Literature. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.15699/jbl.1363.2017.288402
Abstract
This essay treats an instance of literary aemulatio. Paul in Acts 28, like the famous hero Philoctetes, is bitten by a poisonous snake on a secluded island. The responses of these two figures to the bite, however, are fundamentally different. Philoctetes suffers extreme agony after his snakebite; Paul does not register any pain at all. Philoctetes issues horrible cries illustrating the depths of his suffering; Paul does not let out a whimper. Philoctetes begs to be burned with fire; Paul casually shakes off his viper into a fire. Philoctetes must be healed by doctors; Paul himself, after being bitten, becomes a healer. In this depiction, Paul tran-scends the values undergirding Greco-Roman conceptions of the manly hero. Paul is portrayed as a new kind of hero, one who is invulnerable and divine.
School/Institute
Institute for Religion and Critical Inquiry
Document Type
Journal Article
Access Rights
ERA Access