Description

Book Synopsis
A novel treatment of a group of early Christian authors, demonstrating that their behavior and self-presentation were shaped by the norms of Roman intellectual culture, and not simply by factors internal to Christianity.

Trade Review

“This book is a welcome addition to a growing movement by classicists and ancient historians to examine early Christian authors within the horizons of Roman imperial culture (the so-called Second Sophistic). Secord brings to the task an unusually strong command of the scholarship and the Christian texts, married to a firm grasp of the history and non-Christian intellectual trends of the first three centuries CE. Scholars who work with equal comfort on both sides of the pagan-Christian divide are rare; this is a book that scholars in both disciplines will read with profit.”

—Kendra Eshleman,author of The Social World of Intellectuals in the Roman Empire: Sophists, Philosophers, and Christians


“An impressively erudite work, which may prove to be seminal. Secord makes use of a huge range of both classical and Christian texts, many of which are not widely cited in scholarly literature. The copious prosopographic information is genuinely illuminating, and he rightly observes that Christians were not conforming to the times but joining a dissident trend when they styled themselves philosophers.”

—Mark Edwards,author of Christians, Gnostics and Philosophers in Late Antiquity


Christian Intellectuals in the Roman Empire is an engaging and valuable study. Secord succeeds in demonstrating how several key early Christian thinkers participated in the competitive culture of Roman intellectuals, and his contribution surely helps to overcome the traditional exclusion of Christians from the intellectual history of the Greco-Roman world.”

—Jennifer Otto Bryn Mawr Classical Review


“In this valuable and stimulating work, Jared Secord argues that Christianity was not the most important consideration when a Christian intellectual interacted with non-Christians, particularly imperial authority.”

—David Neal Greenwood Journal of Theological Studies



Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments

List of Abbreviations

Introduction

1. Emperors, Intellectuals, and the World of the Roman Empire

2. Justin Martyr: A Would-Be Public Intellectual

3. Tatian Versus the Greeks: Diversity in Christian Intellectual Culture

4. Christian Intellectuals and Cultural Change in the Third Century

Conclusion

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Christian Intellectuals and the Roman Empire From

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    A Hardback by Jared Secord

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      View other formats and editions of Christian Intellectuals and the Roman Empire From by Jared Secord

      Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
      Publication Date: 15/09/2020
      ISBN13: 9780271087078, 978-0271087078
      ISBN10: 0271087072

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A novel treatment of a group of early Christian authors, demonstrating that their behavior and self-presentation were shaped by the norms of Roman intellectual culture, and not simply by factors internal to Christianity.

      Trade Review

      “This book is a welcome addition to a growing movement by classicists and ancient historians to examine early Christian authors within the horizons of Roman imperial culture (the so-called Second Sophistic). Secord brings to the task an unusually strong command of the scholarship and the Christian texts, married to a firm grasp of the history and non-Christian intellectual trends of the first three centuries CE. Scholars who work with equal comfort on both sides of the pagan-Christian divide are rare; this is a book that scholars in both disciplines will read with profit.”

      —Kendra Eshleman,author of The Social World of Intellectuals in the Roman Empire: Sophists, Philosophers, and Christians


      “An impressively erudite work, which may prove to be seminal. Secord makes use of a huge range of both classical and Christian texts, many of which are not widely cited in scholarly literature. The copious prosopographic information is genuinely illuminating, and he rightly observes that Christians were not conforming to the times but joining a dissident trend when they styled themselves philosophers.”

      —Mark Edwards,author of Christians, Gnostics and Philosophers in Late Antiquity


      Christian Intellectuals in the Roman Empire is an engaging and valuable study. Secord succeeds in demonstrating how several key early Christian thinkers participated in the competitive culture of Roman intellectuals, and his contribution surely helps to overcome the traditional exclusion of Christians from the intellectual history of the Greco-Roman world.”

      —Jennifer Otto Bryn Mawr Classical Review


      “In this valuable and stimulating work, Jared Secord argues that Christianity was not the most important consideration when a Christian intellectual interacted with non-Christians, particularly imperial authority.”

      —David Neal Greenwood Journal of Theological Studies



      Table of Contents

      Preface and Acknowledgments

      List of Abbreviations

      Introduction

      1. Emperors, Intellectuals, and the World of the Roman Empire

      2. Justin Martyr: A Would-Be Public Intellectual

      3. Tatian Versus the Greeks: Diversity in Christian Intellectual Culture

      4. Christian Intellectuals and Cultural Change in the Third Century

      Conclusion

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

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