1. Introduction
2. Setting up the debate - the immediate context and beginning of the speech (Acts 17:16-23)
3. Neither 'piety,' nor 'superstition' - redefining Deisidaimonia in the context of Graeco-Roman religious grammar (c. 100 BCE-120 CE)
4. Deisidaimonia, piety and the gods in debate - polemics between epicurean and stoic philosophers around the first century CE
5. Something new in Athens - godlikeness and divine justice in light of the resurrection (Acts 17:22-31)
6. Conclusions - a new interpretation of the argument in Athens and its relation to Greek philosophy
Bibliography
Index of references
Index of authors
Sibject index.