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Cultural World of the New Testament
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Lesson OneHonor and Shame in the Greco-Roman World8 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson TwoHonor and Shame in 1 Peter7 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson ThreePatronage and Reciprocity in the Greco-Roman World7 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson FourPatronage and Reciprocity in Hebrews7 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson FiveKinship and the Household in the Greco-Roman World7 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson SixKinship and the Household in 1 Peter7 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson SevenPurity and Pollution in the Greco-Roman World7 Activities|1 Assessment
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Lesson EightPurity and Pollution in Hebrews7 Activities|1 Assessment
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Course Wrap-UpCourse Completion2 Activities
Participants 5
Lesson 5, Activity 7
Lesson Summary
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Jesus Himself recognized that following Him would jeopardize natural kinship connections, and so speaks of His followers as forming a new family together around Him.
In this lesson, you learned how to:
- Explain key features of kinship and household dynamics in first-century culture.
- Reflect on how the first-century cultural understanding of kinship shaped how the early church related to God and to each other.
- Identify ways to integrate an awareness of the kinship and household dynamics in New Testament culture into your own Bible reading.
Continue to Lesson 6: Kinship and the Household in 1 Peter to see how 1 Peter helps believers reframe their relationship to other believers and to God.