Page 146 - Biblical Backgrounds
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Commerce

               The commerce of ancient Greece was multifaceted. It included educating others, such as teaching. It
               included agriculture such as farming, the production of wine, and other crops. It included shipping goods
               from around the world through the Aegean Sea. It also included many trade jobs such as fishing,
               producing clothing, and creating and selling housing goods. The religious world of idols also created
               commerce as merchants would make idols and symbols to be used worshipping them to sell. Given the
               large number of deities, it was not hard to supply different forms of idols and symbols to the different
               cults. Paul and the other apostles were no strangers to these cults and forms of trade as they ministered
               throughout the Hellenized Roman empire.
                 P2367#y1

                                 Missionary Journeys of Paul

                                 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3L40_vncQQE




                          Let’s Practice…


               1.  How many times did Paul visit Corinth?


               2.  What was Hellenization?

               3.  What were the major cultural contributions of Hellenization?


               4.  Why did Paul have to defend his ministry from the accusations that it lacked the power of
               God?

               5.  What impact does knowing the culture have on interpreting passages that say things like
               “examine yourselves to see if you are in the faith”?


               6-7.  Which deities' names remain unchanged between Greek and Roman rule?

               8.  Why was religion not simply a personal and private thing in Hellenistic Greece?


               9.  How would the message of Christ change the expectation of how Christians behaved when
               gathered together for the Corinthians?












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