The Christians as the Romans saw them

2nd ed.
  • 12 Want to read
The Christians as the Romans saw them
Robert Louis Wilken, Robert Lo ...
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Last edited by MARC Bot
September 2, 2024 | History

The Christians as the Romans saw them

2nd ed.
  • 12 Want to read

From Pliny the Younger (d. 113) to Julian the Apostate (d. 363): a well-written, well-organized, and generally helpful survey of what pagan critics said about Christianity. Wilken (History, Notre Dame) has no new material to offer--most anti-Christian propaganda has been lost or deliberately destroyed by the Church, and much of what survives is found in fragments quoted by Christian apologists--but he puts the work of major controversialists like Celsus and Porphyry into fresh and sometimes illuminating perspective. Instead of treating these polemical texts in the usual fashion, as footnotes to early Christian history, Wilken regards them as evidence of an important dialectical critique that was thoughtful (not mere scandal-mongering, or satire à la Lucian), measured (Galen acknowledged the moral seriousness of Christians even while deploring their irrational dogmatism), and often telling. (Porphyry's argument that the Book of Daniel contains images of Antiochus Epiphanes IV's persecution of the Jews, not prophecies of Jesus' coming, is now a commonplace of biblical exegesis.) Wilken shows how pagan reactions evolved over 2(apple) centuries: early writers such as Tacitus and Pliny had only sketchy notions of Christianity, while their successors studied the New Testament with some care, and Julian had actually been a Christian. And he points out that many of their objections--e.g., Porphyry's, that Jesus was just another heroic sage--are alive and well today. He not only presents the pagans sympathetically, indeed, he seems at times to be cheering them on--as when, echoing Julian's Contra Galilaeos, he dismisses Christian claims to any significant share in Jewish tradition as a ""silly idea."" Wilken is most interesting when he has sociological data to draw on (resemblances between the Church and pious non-Christian burial societies), least interesting when merely paraphrasing a philosophical text (Celsus' True Doctrine, for example.) But all in all a fine performance, useful for the scholar, valuable for the student, accessible to the layman.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
214

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: The Christians as the Romans Saw Them
The Christians as the Romans Saw Them
April 10, 2003, Yale University Press
Paperback in English - 2 edition
Cover of: The Christians as the Romans saw them
The Christians as the Romans saw them
1984, Yale University Press
in English - 2nd ed.
Cover of: The Christians as the Romans Saw Them
The Christians as the Romans Saw Them
1984, Yale University Press
in English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Pliny: a roman gentleman
Christianity as a burial society
The piety of the persecutors
Galen: The curiosity of a philosopher
Celsus: a conservative intellectual
Porphyry: the most learned critic of all
Julian the apostate: Jewish law and christian truth.

Edition Notes

Previous ed.: 1984.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 207-209) and index.

Published in
New Haven, Conn, London

Classifications

Library of Congress
BL2756.W54 2003

The Physical Object

Pagination
xxiii, 214 p. ;
Number of pages
214

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL23383351M
ISBN 10
0300098391
OCLC/WorldCat
59371698, 51272150
Library Thing
81446
Goodreads
135143

Excerpts

ROUNDING CAPE MALEA, THE SOUTHERNMOST TIP OF the Greek Peloponnese, in mid-August 111 C.E., Pliny's ship sailed into the dark waters of the Aegean Sea.
added anonymously.

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