13 research outputs found

    Magic/Thaumaturgy and the Pastorals

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    Spirituality as "good Christian citizenship" in the Pastoral Epistles?

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    Dibelius, in his commentary on the Pastoral Epistles, suggested that they represented a way-of-being in the world resulting from the delay of the parousia. As such they advocate a form of spirituality which can best be described as “good Christian citizenship”. This paper, drawing on both Taylor’s understanding of the “social imaginary” and Waaijman’s understanding of spirituality, examines Dibelius’ contention by revisiting the concept of eusebeia (godliness/piety), which is prevalent in the Pastorals, in the light of the lived experience of pagans, Jews and Christians in first-century Ephesus

    Prologue

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    From text: The contributions in this volume were originally presented as papers at a symposium on the Bible and Spirituality, held at Glenfall House, Cheltenham from 4-6 May 2010 and hosted by the University of Gloucestershire. Initiative for the symposium was taken by Pieter G.R. de Villiers of the University of the Free State and Lloyd Pietersen of the University of Gloucestershire. The meeting was the result of personal contact between the two of them over a number of years to discuss their common interest in Biblical Spirituality and to promote the discipline at their academic institutions. They wish to express their appreciation to Bible Society and to Dr Shelley Saguaro, Head of the Department of Humanities at the University of Gloucestershire, for their support which enabled the symposium to take place

    Bacterial and host determinants of cough aerosol culture positivity in patients with drug-resistant versus drug-susceptible tuberculosis

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    A burgeoning epidemic of drug-resistant tuberculosis threatens to derail global control efforts. Although the mechanisms remain poorly clarified, drug-resistant strains are widely believed to be less infectious than drug-susceptible strains. Consequently, we hypothesised that lower proportions of drug-resistant TB patients would have culturable Mycobacterium tuberculosis from respirable cough-generated aerosols compared to drug-susceptible TB patients, and that multiple factors, including mycobacterial genomic variation, would predict culturable cough aerosol production. We enumerated colony forming units (CFU) in aerosols (≤10μm) from 500 tuberculosis patients (227 with drug-resistance), compared clinical characteristics, and performed mycobacterial whole genome sequencing, dormancy phenotyping, and drug susceptibility analyses on M. tuberculosis from sputum. After considering treatment duration, we found that almost half of drug-resistant tuberculosis patients were cough aerosol culture-positive. Surprisingly, neither mycobacterial genomic variants, lineage, nor dormancy status predicted cough aerosol culture-positivity. However, mycobacterial sputum bacillary load and clinical characteristics, including a lower symptom score and stronger cough, were strongly predictive; thereby supporting targeted transmission-limiting interventions. Effective treatment largely abrogated cough aerosol culture-positivity, however, this was not always rapid. These data question current paradigms, inform public health strategies, and suggest the need to redirect tuberculosis transmission-associated research efforts towards host-pathogen interactions
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