Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://scholarhub.balamand.edu.lb/handle/uob/7560
Title: From Homo Sedentarius to Homo Peregrinator: The Nomadic Nature of Humanity in Luke-Acts
Authors: Ayuch, Daniel Alberto 
Affiliations: Institute of Theology 
Editors: Cosmin Pricop
Karl-Wilhelm Niebuhr
Tobias Nicklas
Keywords: Nomadism
Luke-Acts
Narrative Analysis
Mission
Anthropology
Issue Date: 2024-09
Publisher: Mohr Siebeck
Part of: Images of the Human Being Eighth International East-West Symposium of New Testament Scholars, Caraiman Monastery, May 26 to 31, 2019
Start page: 85
End page: 99
Abstract: 
The choice for this topic depends on many factors that can be summed up
in two main streams. On the one hand, there is an overwhelming number of
people who are driven to the global North because it supposedly offers them
and their families a life of peace and progress, as the migration routes from
the Middle East and Africa to Europe and those from Central America to the
United States demonstrate. Millions undertake this adventure, even though they
are well aware that they are likely to end up stranded in endless purgatories of
aggressive attitudes and excessive bureaucracy. On the other hand, the terrible
ecological consequences of a sedentary lifestyle in large cities make people weak
and dependent, wearing out the environment at an atrocious speed.
Luke advocates a non-sedentary lifestyle, promoting an alternative behaviour
to what was generally adopted in the well-structured Roman empire of those
times. It is not about political changes and mass revolutions, but about an
attitude of life in which the human being is the recipient of a new message and
at the same time the carrier of that message for all the communities of the earth.
But not only that, the behaviour of the recipients of this message is different
from those who live in the sedentary system and who do not communicate with
them because their lifestyle is both corrupt and sterile. This new movement is
particularly linked to the idea of being fruitful and multiplying by disseminating
the message and achieving new challenges.
URI: https://scholarhub.balamand.edu.lb/handle/uob/7560
ISBN: 978-3-16-160638-0
DOI: 10.1628/978-3-16-160638-0
Open URL: Link to full text
Type: Book Chapter
Appears in Collections:Institute of Theology

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