Keener, Craig2024-11-192024-11-192022The Biblical Annals, 2022, T. 12, nr 2, s. 255-277.2451-21682083-2222https://theo-logos.pl/handle/123456789/23874Artykuł w języku angielskim.Most ancient thinkers believed that passions corrupted rational thinking, and that reason should control passions; Jewish apologists, however, often chided Gentiles for being ruled by passion, and sometimes offered Jewish law as a way to achieve genuine mastery over passion. Using language familiar to his contemporaries, Paul argues that human passions have corrupted reason’s ability to control them, and even right knowledge of God’s law cannot deliver one from this enslavement. For Paul, however, Christ by the Spirit liberates from bondage to passion, enabling a relationship with and life pleasing to God.enCC-BY - Uznanie autorstwapassionsspiritfleshRomans 7:14-25reasonPaul the Apostlebodymind of the SpiritmindPaul the Apostle’s anthropologyletters of Saint PaulNew TestamentBibleanthropologytheologybiblical studiesexegesisbiblical exegesisLetter to the RomansphilosophyreligionHoly SpiritnamiętnościduchciałorozumPaweł apostołumysł Duchaumysłantropologia Pawła apostołalisty św. PawłaNowy TestamentBibliaPismo Święteantropologiateologiabiblistykaegzegezaegzegeza biblijnaList do RzymianRz 7filozofiareligiaDuch ŚwiętyBody, Mind, and Passions in Romans: Paul’s Alternative View within His Philosophical and Religious ContextArticle