Determining the Types of Economic Evidence Sample Clauses

Determining the Types of Economic Evidence. Relevant for the Interpretation of John 2:13–22 and Defining Temple Commerce More than anything, our investigation must be centered on the temple and its economy. This point of departure finds its basis in the passage itself. Despite the attention given in scholarship to the logion in 2:19, both halves of the scene contain a saying of Jesus that has to do with the temple. The first of these sayings, in 2:16, ends with Jesus’ statement that the temple is being made into %:;%/ 4µ!%(&%=. This detail provides the basis through which we can see how economic evidence illuminates this passage. Because by his words and actions Jesus interrupts the temple’s functioning as a place of commerce, there is warrant to investigate the types of economic evidence available as a resource for interpretation. Comparative evidence is evidence drawn from a different geographical, temporal, and/or social context than that of the text under investigation. Some types of evidence fall into multiple categories, as do inscriptions, for example. See Peter Oakes, “Methodological Issues in Using Economic Evidence in Interpretation of Early Christian Texts,” in Engaging Economics: New Testament Scenarios and Early Christian Reception (ed. Bruce W. Longenecker and Kelly D. Liebengood; Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2009), 13–27.
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