Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- 1 Reading Acts in the second century: reflections on method, history, and desire
- 2 Jerusalem destroyed: the setting of Acts
- 3 Acts and the apostles: issues of leadership in the second century
- 4 Spec(tac)ular sights: mirroring in/of Acts
- 5 Acts of ascension: history, exaltation, and ideological legitimation
- 6 Time and space travel in Luke-Acts
- 7 The complexity of pairing: reading Acts 16 with Plutarch's Parallel Lives
- 8 Constructing Paul as a Christian in the Acts of the Apostles
- 9 Bold speech, opposition, and philosophical imagery in Acts
- 10 Among the apologists? Reading Acts with Justin Martyr
- 11 The Second Sophistic and the cultural idealization of Paul in Acts
- 12 Reading Luke-Acts in second-century Alexandria: from Clement to the Shadow of Apollos
- Bibliography
- Index of primary sources
- Index of authors
- Subject index
4 - Spec(tac)ular sights: mirroring in/of Acts
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- 1 Reading Acts in the second century: reflections on method, history, and desire
- 2 Jerusalem destroyed: the setting of Acts
- 3 Acts and the apostles: issues of leadership in the second century
- 4 Spec(tac)ular sights: mirroring in/of Acts
- 5 Acts of ascension: history, exaltation, and ideological legitimation
- 6 Time and space travel in Luke-Acts
- 7 The complexity of pairing: reading Acts 16 with Plutarch's Parallel Lives
- 8 Constructing Paul as a Christian in the Acts of the Apostles
- 9 Bold speech, opposition, and philosophical imagery in Acts
- 10 Among the apologists? Reading Acts with Justin Martyr
- 11 The Second Sophistic and the cultural idealization of Paul in Acts
- 12 Reading Luke-Acts in second-century Alexandria: from Clement to the Shadow of Apollos
- Bibliography
- Index of primary sources
- Index of authors
- Subject index
Summary
Among the synoptic writers, Luke exhibits the most sustained interest in developing his gospel through the language of optics. As Hamm (1986) has demonstrated, not only does Jesus' mission center on bringing sight to the blind, but his very presence invites observation, forcing others to respond to him through their visual examinations. Does this literary feature extend into Luke's companion volume? Hamm intimates that it does, although his suggestion has, as far as I know, remained underdeveloped. This essay thus picks up his line of inquiry by reading Acts alongside a wider collection of traditions that highlight the power of vision and employ the mirror in discussions of exemplarity and self-improvement. In this text, Luke returns once more to optics in order to explore the theological and social dimensions of the early Christian movement. Specifically, he constructs Jesus' disciples as witnesses to divine power, agents of God whose keen eyesight reveals their authority, and imitators of Christ whose capacity to see the resurrected Jesus shapes and validates their character. These observations lead to an investigation of the reception of Acts in an effort to show how second-century audiences might have appreciated its stories as “mirrors” through which to forge their own sense of identity.
VISION, MIRRORS, AND EXEMPLARITY
The power of vision
if anyone wants to have sharp vision, it is the eyes … which must be given attention
(Apuleius, De deo Socr. 168)Ancient writers thought of vision as a dynamic act.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Engaging Early Christian HistoryReading Acts in the Second Century, pp. 59 - 78Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2013