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山道期刊

总第五十二期(2023年12月)

主题: 贫与富
包括专题文章六篇、讨论文章一篇及书评五篇
页数: ix+214
售价: HK$100
编者的话 点击查阅
专题文章
戴浩辉 旧约中的贫与富(一):五经与叙事文体 Abstract
陈耀明 财富与贫穷:耶和华对土地的要求 Abstract
梁俊豪 从古今观点看贫穷、仅足生存与保罗群体的经济地位 Abstract
黄汉辉 保罗的贫富互惠逆转思维 Abstract
辛惠兰 贫与富相依:《黑马牧人书》的启迪 Abstract
刘振鹏 教会,贫穷与你何干⋯⋯! ? ——阐释尤达的主餐践行之神学及伦理意义 Abstract
讨论文章
梁以利亚 基督教伦理与生命更新之关系:探讨圣灵的角色和更新的本质 Abstract
  • 编者的话

    邓绍光

    贫富不均是一个全球性的社会现象,不单现今世代如此,古代的旧约及新约世界也是一样。因此,本期《山道期刊》以「贫与富」为主题,邀请不同学者撰文讨论,范围包括旧约、新约、早期教会、基督教伦理等不同领域。

    戴浩辉的〈旧约中的贫与富(一):五经与叙事文体〉分析五经中的律法,从而表明贫富是当时的事实。可是,律法却没有要求消灭贫穷,而是要求耶和华的子民承担起照顾贫穷人的责任。此文指出,财富是上帝赐福的象征,但以色列人的故事并非关乎财富,而是关乎上帝的应许和护佑。再者,财富只是上帝的礼物,而人致富的经过并非必然光彩。陈耀明的〈财富与贫穷:耶和华对土地的要求〉则把贫富问题的焦点放在古代以色列如何对待土地的态度上。身为与上帝立约的子民,他们要视土地为耶和华赐赠的礼物,不可以像邻国那样把土地变成崇拜的偶像。可是以色列人却走上歧路,骨子里拒绝耶和华的主权,破坏了上帝与人之间的关系。这种情况的具体表现就是他们没有遵守律法,好好管理大地,结果造成社会贫富悬殊,且被无数先知批评,要求以色列人承认财富是上帝的礼物,且更要好好照顾他们当中的贫穷人。

    梁俊豪的〈从古今观点看贫穷、仅足生存与保罗群体的经济地位〉和黄汉辉的〈保罗的贫富互惠逆转思维〉都与保罗研究有关。前者关心的是如何理解保罗群体的经济情况,后者侧重保罗对贫富的看法。梁俊豪指出现代学者对希罗社会的经济状况和财富分配不均的研究,对分析保罗群体的贫穷状况甚有帮助,而讨论的焦点集中在:(1)希罗社会的阶层结构属「二分结构」(「旧共识」,即精英与非精英)、「三分结构」(即精英与非精英之间存在「中间阶层」),还是贫富程度在人口分布中是逐渐变化(「新共识」) ? (2)保罗、信徒领袖及信仰群体是包含了社会的各个阶层,能代表希罗社会的阶层结构(「新共识」),还是成员都集中在贫穷阶层(「旧共识」)? (3)现代社会关于财富分配不均的研究,如何应用于希罗社会以至保罗群体?把非精英阶层按「仅足生存」开支的倍数来建构六等分的经济水平阶梯,是否比按职业和身分标签划分的「贫穷/ 经济尺度」,更有效地描述希罗社会贫穷人口的分布?黄汉辉的文章,则分析保罗在马其顿及亚该亚教会为耶路撒冷教会收集捐款的事情,从而探讨保罗所抱持的一种贫富「互惠」思维。他首先以保罗在罗马书十五章22至29节提及收集捐款一事为起点,然后分别触及哥林多书信(林前十六1-4;林后八~九)和加拉太书(二10);最后回到罗马书,探讨保罗在罗马书十五章22至29节提出的捐款收集其背后的「互惠」思维。保罗没有在传道的过程中解决社会的贫富问题,但因着「在基督里」,教会群体可以超越不同的界限,当中的信徒可以彼此互惠;在上帝那倾流的丰富恩典下,有余的可以补不足的,以致不会有人缺乏,或有人过剩。

    辛惠兰的〈贫与富相依:《黑马牧人书》的启迪〉,探讨第二世纪使徒教父著作《黑马牧人书》第五十一章的第二比喻,借此了解教会中的富人和穷人应有的关系;就是使用「榆树」和「葡萄树」的共生关系,来类比他们的关系,从而说明两者也是相互依存协作的。这种看法可以视为承袭了圣经传统中「敬虔贫穷人」和「邪恶富有人」的部分看法,并采纳当代罗马的恩主(patronage)文化而有所发展,避免将「贫」、「富」置放在矛盾对立的两极,反而探索双方如何运用各自的强项和独有的(物质/ 属灵)资源,互补相依,彼此成全,一起结出最多的果子。刘振鹏的〈教会,贫穷与你何干……! ? ——阐释尤达的主餐践行之神学及伦理意义〉,旨在探索神学家尤达(John H. Yoder)对主餐的看法,从而指出其伦理意涵在于基督徒的关顾和慈爱,这不应只局限于对待自己人,也当延伸至外人身上,且不应只关心本地的需要,也当注意邻国的困难。本文首先简介尤达的《身体政治》(Body Politics),继而讨论尤达讲述的主餐的意涵,跟着分析主餐、禧年、弥赛亚三者的关系,最后仔细检视主餐的伦理意涵。

    本期的讨论文章有梁以利亚的〈基督教伦理与生命更新之关系:探讨圣灵的角色和更新的本质〉。此文讨论圣灵在基督教伦理及生命更新上有什么重要性,以及新生命的本质,并提出伦理应用上实质的建议。至于本期的书评,评述的著作涵盖多个领域,既包括圣经神学、早期教会历史,也涉及释经方法、宣教神学、系统神学等各方面。透过评论者对他人研究成果的考察,我们不单可以从中知道知识前沿的发展,也可以在他人的基础上再行思考相关课题,有所进深。

  • Wealth and Poverty in the Old Testament (I): The Pentateuch and Narratives

    TAI Ho-fai Nicholas

    Discussing the issue of wealth and poverty in the Old Testament is a broad and profound task. It can be examined in various contexts such as Old Testament ethics and social history. In addition, the long history of the Old Testament Israel increases the difficulty, and how we understand the formation history of the Old Testament itself also affects how we approach this topic. Therefore, the article will only give a brief overview of the concepts of wealth and poverty in the Pentateuch. The usage of Hebrew words for wealth and poverty in the Pentateuch will be analyzed so as to see how these concepts function in their respective contexts.

    From the perspective of the laws in the Pentateuch, poverty is a reality. The laws do not demand the elimination of it, but as the people of Yahweh (free Israelites), Israel is obliged to care for the poor. On the other hand, based on the stories of the patriarchs, several points about the concept of wealth can be established: First, wealth is a symbol of God's blessing. Second, the stories are not about wealth but God's promises and His providence. Third, the patriarchs all realized that wealth was a gift from God. Finally, the process of getting rich is not necessarily a glorious one. Many times, they were in difficult situations, but with the protection and blessing of God, their difficulties were turned into blessings.

  • Wealth and Poverty: Yahweh's Demand for the Land

    CHAN Yew Ming

    Ancient Israel received land from Yahweh who established a covenant with them. Yahweh expected Israel to understand that the land is a unique gift that requires Israelites to manage the land and avoid the pitfalls of their neighbours. Unfortunately, these Israelites failed to comprehend the nature of the gift and instead opted for the institutionalisation of their society and fell into idolatry. Their mismanagement of the land revealed a rejection of Yahweh's sovereignty that led to a breakdown in the divine-human relationship. Yahweh's specific demands were established via the Law, and numerous prophets reminded Israel to meet them. Israel's failure to keep the Law and its mismanagement of the land produced a society that requires tackling the divide between the affluent and the poor. The Old Testament acknowledges that wealth is a gift but reminds us that the poor must be taken care of and fairly treated.

  • Ancient and Modern Perceptions of Poverty, Subsistence and the Economic Location of the Pauline Communities

    LEUNG Chun Ho Bernard

    This paper explores the perceptions of poverty in Graeco-Roman society and the modern world, along with their implications for evaluating the economic circumstances of the Pauline communities. The initial sections of this study aim to elucidate the challenges associated with defining and perceiving poverty in scholarly debates. Given that poverty is a universally subjective human experience, describing and comparing the situation of “the poor” becomes a difficult, if not impossible, task. To analyze the limited and occasionally distorted data on the economic conditions of the ancient world, researchers require contemporary categories, languages, and research methods. Once the methodological issues have been clarified, this paper will provide an overview of the recent discussion about the economic situation of the Pauline communities, emphasizing the problem surrounding the utilization of the concept of “subsistence” in these discussions.

  • Paul's Reciprocity on the Poor and Rich

    Solomon HF WONG

    At the end of the letter to the Romans, Paul says that he will come to visit Rome after he has delivered to Jerusalem the collection raised from the churches of Macedonia and Achaia. Paul also mentioned this collection in the Corinthian correspondence and Galatians. The collection of donations for the poor among the saints in Jerusalem seems to have become significantly important for Paul's ministry. Why is this collection important to Paul's ministry and why is this also related to his planned visit to Rome in the near future? The grace of God in Christ (Christ event) and human actions seem to play a reciprocal role in this nascent eschatological community. This paper is an attempt to trace the reciprocity thinking of Paul on the collection regarding the relationship between the rich and poor on the one hand, and between the gentile believers and Jewish believers on the other. We begin our exegetical journey with Romans 15:22-29; then, we lightly touch on 1 Corinthians 16:1-4 and 2 Corinthians 8-9, and Galatians 2:10; and finally, we come back to Romans 15:22-29 for a glimpse of Paul's aim of writing Romans.

  • The Rich and the Poor Need Each Other: Illumination from Shepherd of Hermas

    Joyce Wai-Lan SUN

    To many Christians, almsgiving and caring for the poor are biblical requirements and thus, natural responsibilities for every Christ follower. In the course of giving and receiving, however, those in need are often reduced to mere passive receivers who must look upon the sheer mercy of those who have. The poor are generally regarded as having nothing to give in return so any act of mercy can hardly serve to shorten the social distance between the rich and the poor.

    This essay looks into the model of almsgiving envisioned in the Parable of the Elm and the Vine in the Shepherd of Hermas (chapter 51) and demonstrates how Hermas postulates the relationship between the rich and the poor as one of mutual interdependence and partnership in the works of God. It then contrasts Hermas's vision of the rich-poor relationship with that portrayed in the biblical tradition of “the pious poor” and “the wicked rich,” and the Roman culture of patronage. The essay concludes that the model of mutual interdependence advocated in the Shepherd of Hermas deserves to be given more thought by the churches in Hong Kong, in which membership including both the rich and the poor is even more commonplace now than in ancient times.

  • Poverty, None of the Church's Business … !?: Exploring the Theological and Ethical Significance of John Howard Yoder's Discourse on the Practice of the Lord's Supper

    Vincent CP LAU

    The discourse on the Lord's Supper by John Howard Yoder in his Body Politics specifies that both spiritual and ethical significance is indispensable. The latter pertains to the sociological implications of the practice that Jesus' disciples are required to share their possessions with others who are in need . This is an embodiment of Yahweh's order of Jubilee: “there should not be any poor among you …” (Dt 15:4 NET). Such kind of sharing and provision of basic daily needs with one another is a mark of the messianic age . The ethical significance of the Lord's Supper is that the church is called to pay close attention to and provide relief for the needy people as a matter of course. There is thus no excuse for the church to ignore the needs of people around us. The care and love of Christians should not be confined to “insiders,” but also include “outsiders,” not only locally focused but also internationally concerned. The Jubilee 2000 Campaign and the Jubilee Debt Campaign can be regarded as an embodiment of the Christian faith. More importantly, it can serve as an alternative paradigm for global economic practice.
    The purposes of this essay are to explore the theological and sociological connotations of the Lord's Supper of Yoder's discourse in his book and to explicate the ethical significance of the church derived from the Lord's Supper on the issue of poverty and the actions of poverty alleviation. The essay consists of four parts: Firstly, the theological concepts of Body Politics are introduced briefly. Secondly, the discourse on and the significance of the Lord's Supper discussed by Yoder are examined. Thirdly, the theological conceptual relationship among the Lord's Supper, Jubilee, and messiah is analyzed. Finally, the ethical significance of the Lord's Supper is scrutinized.

  • The Relationship between Christian Ethics and the Transformation of Life: A Study of the Role of the Holy Spirit and the Nature of Transformation

    Elijah LIANG Yi Li Yah

    Since Thomas Aquinas, Christian ethics and virtue ethics have been closely intertwined. In recent discussions, some scholars have even equated Christian ethics with virtue ethics. However, while Christian ethics embodies virtuous qualities, it should not be limited to virtue or theological virtue, as a Christian's life begins with being crucified and resurrected with Christ, resulting in a new life. Therefore, to truly understand Christian ethics, it is essential to clarify the relationship between this new life and ethics. Otherwise, Christian ethics might devolve into humanistic ethics or become a self-help spiritual growth. This article explores the views of three scholars who emphasize the significance of the Holy Spirit in Christian ethics and delve into anthropology to explore the nature of human transformation and how it relates to being crucified and resurrected with Christ and guided by the Holy Spirit. Furthermore, in order to gain a deeper understanding of the meaning of life, this article also explores the concepts of human creation, fall, and Paul's discourse on new life in Romans and Galatians from this perspective. Finally, based on our research findings, this article offers substantial ethical application recommendations.

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