James R. McConnell

The topos of Divine Testimony in Luke-Acts


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will unfold in five chapters. The first of these chapters will provide an understanding of the topos of divine testimony as described in the ancient rhetorical handbooks as well as the Progymnasmata. The chapter will investigate the ancient rhetoricians’ descriptions of the topos, in order to attempt to define this concept from the ancients’ perspective. The discussion will become increasingly specific, with the goal of arriving at the most effective type of inartificial proof, that of divine testimony. Once this is accomplished, ancient Greco-Roman speeches and philosophical treatises will be surveyed, with an eye toward the function of divine testimony through word and deed in actual arguments. The goal of this chapter is to demonstrate the high value of the topos of authoritative testimony, including the sources thereof, in the ancient world, and to argue that divine testimony was the strongest source of this type of proof.

      The third chapter will examine how an ancient audience would have understood divine testimony through utterances by examining passages in Jewish and Greco-Roman histories and biographies, as well as early, non-canonical Christian writings roughly contemporary with Luke-Acts. In these sources, direct speech by the gods, divine speech through an inspired intermediary, and the use of oracles will be analyzed; from this analysis the function within the narratives of this type of divine testimony will be explicated. The expected result of this analysis is that divine speech is often used as testimony, either in favor of or against a person or an event. These results will then be used as a baseline and compared to the accounts of divine speech in Luke-Acts, which are examined in chapter four. As in chapter three, direct speech by God, speech through inspired intermediaries (those “filled with the Spirit”), and written utterances by God will be examined. A significant facet of the argument in this chapter is the equation, from an ancient audience’s perspective, of the use of oracles in Hellenistic narratives and references to Hebrew scriptures in Luke-Acts. The chapter will ultimately demonstrate that an ancient audience would have heard the topos of divine testimony through utterances in Luke-Acts in the same way as in extra-biblical narratives of the same period.

      The next two chapters parallel the previous two; here, however, the focus will be on the topos of divine testimony through deeds, rather than speech. The structure of the investigations will follow Cicero’s description of what constitutes divine testimony through deeds (Top. 20.76–77). This description will also control which specific accounts in Luke-Acts constitute divine testimony through deeds. Therefore, not all instances of the miraculous will be considered; only those elements within the narrative that fall under Cicero’s categories will be examined. The goal of these chapters is, as in chapters two and three, to demonstrate that the topos of divine testimony through deeds would have been understood by an ancient audience to function in ways similar to those seen in Hellenistic narratives and biographies.