New Books in Catholic Studies

Paula Fredriksen, "Ancient Christianities: The First Five Hundred Years" (Princeton UP, 2024)

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Dec 23, 2024
Paula Fredriksen, a historian specializing in ancient Mediterranean religions and early Christianity, shines a light on the diverse landscape of early Christianities in her latest work. She explores how a Jewish movement expanded into Gentile territories through apocalyptic visions and missionary zeal. Fredriksen also delves into the contentious debates of the second century, the role of martyrdom in shaping identity, and the evolution from various Christianities to a singular imperial church under Constantine.
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INSIGHT

Apocalyptic Spark Drove Early Expansion

  • Early Christianity began as a specifically Jewish apocalyptic movement expecting an imminent kingdom of God.
  • That eschatological spark explains why Jewish message spread to pagans who joined as ex-pagans preparing for the end.
INSIGHT

Audience Shift Made Arguments Anti-Jewish

  • As Christian texts moved from Jewish to Gentile audiences, intra-Jewish disputes turned into anti-Jewish arguments.
  • Changing readership made debates about correct interpretation become accusations against Jews.
INSIGHT

Rhetoric Fueled Doctrinal Diversity

  • Second-century diversity emerged because ex-pagan intellectuals applied Hellenistic agonistic rhetoric to Christian disputes.
  • That rhetorical training produced intense public argumentation and many competing Christianities.
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