La cartografía bíblica y el relato normativo de la misión paulina

  1. Santiago Guijarro Oporto 1
  1. 1 Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca
    info

    Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca

    Salamanca, España

    ROR https://ror.org/02jj93564

Revista:
Estudio agustiniano: Revista del Estudio Teológico Agustiniano de Valladolid

ISSN: 0425-340X 2792-260X

Any de publicació: 2023

Volum: 58

Fascicle: 2

Pàgines: 249-269

Tipus: Article

DOI: 10.53111/EA.V58I2.1105 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openDialnet editor

Altres publicacions en: Estudio agustiniano: Revista del Estudio Teológico Agustiniano de Valladolid

Resum

Biblical cartography has elabo-rated a master narrative of Paul’s mis-sionary activity. This master narrative, which clearly distinguishes between three different journeys, is the one presupposed in Bibles and Biblical atlases. Nevertheless, Paul’s letters and the Book of Acts do not support such a clear distinction. The present study contends that the dis-tinction between three missionary jour-neys is a modern construct and that this way of representing Paul’s missionary ac-tivity has a significant impact on how we understand it. By representing Paul’s mis-sionary activity as an orderly sequence of three travels, the maps not only minimise the novelty of his independent mission but also lessen Paul’s confrontation with the Jerusalem church. In this representa-tion, he is no longer the marginal leader of a minority movement within the nascent church, but ‘the’ missionary.