Part One: The Redaction of the Corinthian Letters
1.Introduction
2.The Partition and Redaction of 2 Corinthians
3.The Need to Partition 1 Corinthians
4.The Redaction of 1 Corinthians
Part Two: The Provenance and Rhetoric of the Original Letters
5.Letter A: Troubles in Worship (1 Corinthians 11:2-34a + 16:1-4 + 11:34b)
6.Letter B: The Body Matters (2 Cor 6:14‒7:1 + 1 Cor 6:12-20 + 1 Cor 9:24‒10:22 + 1 Cor 15:1-58 + 1 Cor 16:13-24)7.Letter C: Arguing for Unity (1 Cor 1:1‒6:11 + 7:1‒8:13 + 9:19-23 + 10:23‒11:1 + 12:1-31a + 14:1c-33a + 12:31b‒13:13 + 16:5-12)8.Letter D: Reorganizing the Offering (2 Cor. 8:1-24)
9.Letter E: Apology for Paul’s Apostleship (2 Cor 2:14‒6:13 + 2 Cor 7:2-4)
10.Letter F: Anguish of Heart and Many Tears (2 Cor 10:1‒12:13 + 1 Cor 9:1-18 + 2 Cor 12:14‒13:13)
11.Letter G: Consolation for the Afflicted (2 Cor 1:1-2:13 + 2 Cor 7:5-16 + 2 Cor 13:11-13)
12.Letter H: An Appeal to the Achaians (2 Corinthians 9:1-15)
Part Three: Reflections on the Redaction of the Original Letters
13.Redirecting Paul’s Ministry
Part Four: Historical Implications
14.The Publication of 1 and 2 Corinthians: From Scroll to Codex
Appendices
Appendix I. Summary of the Jewett-Hughes Partition Theory in Relation to the Canonical
1 and 2 Corinthians
Appendix II. Schematic Representations of the Redactional Process
Appendix III. Previous Partition and Redaction Theories
Appendix IV. Translation of the Eight Original Corinthian Letters