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Max Lee
  • Chicago, Illinois, United States
Page 1. Seyoon Kim Christ and Caesar The Gospel and the roman empire in the Writings of Paul and Luke Page 2. ... Christ and Caesar: the Gospel and the Roman Empire in the writings of Paul and Luke / Seyoon Kim. p. cm. Includes... more
Page 1. Seyoon Kim Christ and Caesar The Gospel and the roman empire in the Writings of Paul and Luke Page 2. ... Christ and Caesar: the Gospel and the Roman Empire in the writings of Paul and Luke / Seyoon Kim. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ...
Review by Najeeb Haddad of Moral Transformation in Greco-Roman Philosophy of Mind in Ancient Philosophy 42, no. 1 (2022), 322-25
“Greek Words and Roman Meanings, Part 2: A Prolegomenon to Paul’s Use of Righteousness Language in His Letters.” In Fire in My Soul: Essays on Pauline Soteriology and the Gospels in Honor of Seyoon Kim, edited by Soon Bong Choi, Jin Ki... more
“Greek Words and Roman Meanings, Part 2: A Prolegomenon to Paul’s Use of Righteousness Language in His Letters.” In Fire in My Soul: Essays on Pauline Soteriology and the Gospels in Honor of Seyoon Kim, edited by Soon Bong Choi, Jin Ki Hwang and Max J. Lee, 29–52. Eugene: Wipf and Stock, 2014
“Greek Words and Roman Meanings, Part 1: (Re)mapping Righteousness Language in Greco-Roman Discourse.” In Fire in My Soul: Essays on Pauline Soteriology and the Gospels in Honor of Seyoon Kim, edited by Soon Bong Choi, Jin Ki Hwang and... more
“Greek Words and Roman Meanings, Part 1: (Re)mapping Righteousness Language in Greco-Roman Discourse.” In Fire in My Soul: Essays on Pauline Soteriology and the Gospels in Honor of Seyoon Kim, edited by Soon Bong Choi, Jin Ki Hwang and Max J. Lee, 3–28. Eugene: Wipf and Stock, 2014
“Ancient Mentors and Moral Progress according to Galen and Paul.” In Doing Theology for the Church: Essays in Honor of Klyne Snodgrass, ed. by Rebekah A. Eklund and John E. Phelan, Jr., 55–70. Eugene: Wipf and Stock , 2014
The book provides a synoptic picture of the moral traditions – especially those of Platonism and Stoicism – which shaped the intellectual and cultural environment of Greco-Roman antiquity. It describes each philosophical school’s... more
The book provides a synoptic picture of the moral traditions – especially those of Platonism and Stoicism – which shaped the intellectual and cultural environment of Greco-Roman antiquity. It describes each philosophical school’s respective teachings on diverse moral topoi such as emotional control, ethical action and habit, character formation, training, mentorship, and deity. It then organizes each school’s tenets into systemic models of moral transformation. For Platonism, I analyze the works of Plato, Plutarch, Alcinous and Galen; and for Stoicism, Zeno, Chrysippus, Musonius Rufus, Seneca, and Epictetus, among others. I also construct a taxonomy of six interaction types to gauge how rival religio-philosophical sects, including Diaspora Judaism and Pauline Christianity, appropriated moral traditions from their Greco-Roman environment to articulate their own system of ethics. For further details, see these blog posts: http://paulredux.blogspot.com/2020/03/it-is-finished-moral-transformation-in.html
Review of Moral Transformation in Greco-Roman Philosphy of Mind in Religious Studies Review (RSR) 47 (2021), 531-32
Review by Étienne Nodet in Review Biblique 128 (2021), 469-70
This is a review of my WUNT2 monograph Moral Transformation by Timothy Brookins published by SBL Central (= the Review of Biblical Literature)
This is a review of my WUNT2 monograph Moral Transformation by Matt Thiessen published by SBL Central (= the Review of Biblical Literature)
This is a short epitome of my monograph Moral Transformation in Greco-Roman Philosophy of Mind published by the editors of New Testament Abstracts 64/2 2020