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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 6, Activity 7
Lesson Summary
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We need to decide if other Christians are just nice people we’re glad to be around or, indeed, the family God has given to us, and to whom God has given us, for eternity. Only if we are willing to view one another as the latter will we realize the depth of mutual commitment, encouragement, and help Jesus and His apostles intended for us to provide for one another.
In this lesson, you learned how to:
- Interpret aspects of kinship in New Testament writings.
- Reflect on how kinship in the New Testament shapes how we think about and relate to God.
- Identify aspects of the appeals of kinship in the New Testament that can shape relationships in your own community of faith.
Continue to Lesson 7: Purity and Pollution in the Greco-Roman World to learn about how first-century Jews understood purity and pollution in light of God’s command to “be holy as I am holy.”