Description

Book Synopsis
Examines the role of the Roman emperors' slaves in the rise of Christianity, and how imperial slaves were essential to early Christians' self-conception as a distinct people in the Mediterranean.

Trade Review

“Flexsenhar reassesses the evidence of Philippians; he de-romanticises comparative materials from the catacombs. The result is a short, readable, and persuasive masterpiece of deconstruction.”

—Cally Hammond Church Times


“The book will be helpful to anyone interested in ancient slavery and the myths associated with the rise of Christianity.”

—Ronald Charles Reading Religion


“With an incisive, cogent, and creative application of memory studies to early Christian literature, Michael Flexsenhar III’s Christians in Caesar’s Household presents us with a critical picture of how and why early Christian authors felt it so strategically important to memorialize Christian imperial slaves. Flexsenhar’s work demonstrates aptly that early Christianity fashioned itself imperially, using slavery to shape its identity in ways that will be, without a doubt, everlasting.”

—Chris L. de Wet,author of The Unbound God: Slavery and the Formation of Early Christian Thought


“Debunking a popular view that Christians in the days of Paul had already infiltrated the inner circles of imperial power, Flexsenhar argues instead that stories about the household of Caesar helped Christians map their identity through late antiquity. This book deftly demonstrates the importance of material culture for the interpretation of literary sources.”

—Jennifer Glancy,author of Slavery in Early Christianity


Christians in Caesar’s Household weaves a truly reformative story about Christian imperial freedpersons and thus about imperial acceptance of Christianity in the fourth century. Flexsenhar turns a critical lens on the usual triumphalist narrative, using both texts and archaeology to fundamentally shift our historical understanding to account for the brutality and messiness of slavery’s legacy in the Christian ascendancy.”

—Katherine A. Shaner,author of Enslaved Leadership in Early Christianity


“[A summary of this book] cannot do justice to the scope of the evidence and the richness and depth of the analysis brought to bear by Flexsenhar on this fascinating tradition. Scholars of early Christianity will henceforth need to revisit the construct of the Roman imperial court as infiltrated by Christian slaves and freedmen with closer attention to the apologetic intent of the literary sources, the ambiguity of the epigraphy, and the realities of Roman slavery.”

—Mary Ann Beavis Catholic Biblical Quarterly


“With its thoughtful critical readings of literary and material sources and its fresh analysis of the lived experiences of imperial slaves and freedpersons, Christians in Caesar’s Household is indispensable reading for scholars of early Christianity, the origins of religion, and the Roman Empire.”

—Catherine Hezser Society of Biblical Literature


“A valuable and compelling exploration of how a shard of fact was turned into a memory and elaborated into a legendary motif.”

—Kyle Harper Church History


“Flexsenhar’s monograph has provided a wealth of information about the history of imperial slavery as well as about how early Christians employed social memory to invent themselves.”

—Isaac Blois Review of Biblical Literature



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

List of Abbreviations

Introduction

1 Paul, the Philippians, and Caesar’s Household (Phil 4:22)

2 Paul, Peter, and Nero’s Slaves: Martyrdoms and Apostolic Acts

3 Rome’s Imperial Household in Christian Polemic and Apologetic

4 Christian Piety and a Martyred Slave of Caesar

5 Material Evidence for a Christian Imperial Freedman

6 Christians and Imperial Personnel in Rome’s Catacombs

Conclusion: The Memory of Imperial Slavery in Early Christianity

Appendixes

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Christians in Caesars Household The Emperors

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    A Paperback / softback by Michael Flexsenhar III

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      View other formats and editions of Christians in Caesars Household The Emperors by Michael Flexsenhar III

      Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
      Publication Date: Publication Date: 20/08/2020
      ISBN13: 9780271082349, 978-0271082349
      ISBN10: 0271082348

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Examines the role of the Roman emperors' slaves in the rise of Christianity, and how imperial slaves were essential to early Christians' self-conception as a distinct people in the Mediterranean.

      Trade Review

      “Flexsenhar reassesses the evidence of Philippians; he de-romanticises comparative materials from the catacombs. The result is a short, readable, and persuasive masterpiece of deconstruction.”

      —Cally Hammond Church Times


      “The book will be helpful to anyone interested in ancient slavery and the myths associated with the rise of Christianity.”

      —Ronald Charles Reading Religion


      “With an incisive, cogent, and creative application of memory studies to early Christian literature, Michael Flexsenhar III’s Christians in Caesar’s Household presents us with a critical picture of how and why early Christian authors felt it so strategically important to memorialize Christian imperial slaves. Flexsenhar’s work demonstrates aptly that early Christianity fashioned itself imperially, using slavery to shape its identity in ways that will be, without a doubt, everlasting.”

      —Chris L. de Wet,author of The Unbound God: Slavery and the Formation of Early Christian Thought


      “Debunking a popular view that Christians in the days of Paul had already infiltrated the inner circles of imperial power, Flexsenhar argues instead that stories about the household of Caesar helped Christians map their identity through late antiquity. This book deftly demonstrates the importance of material culture for the interpretation of literary sources.”

      —Jennifer Glancy,author of Slavery in Early Christianity


      Christians in Caesar’s Household weaves a truly reformative story about Christian imperial freedpersons and thus about imperial acceptance of Christianity in the fourth century. Flexsenhar turns a critical lens on the usual triumphalist narrative, using both texts and archaeology to fundamentally shift our historical understanding to account for the brutality and messiness of slavery’s legacy in the Christian ascendancy.”

      —Katherine A. Shaner,author of Enslaved Leadership in Early Christianity


      “[A summary of this book] cannot do justice to the scope of the evidence and the richness and depth of the analysis brought to bear by Flexsenhar on this fascinating tradition. Scholars of early Christianity will henceforth need to revisit the construct of the Roman imperial court as infiltrated by Christian slaves and freedmen with closer attention to the apologetic intent of the literary sources, the ambiguity of the epigraphy, and the realities of Roman slavery.”

      —Mary Ann Beavis Catholic Biblical Quarterly


      “With its thoughtful critical readings of literary and material sources and its fresh analysis of the lived experiences of imperial slaves and freedpersons, Christians in Caesar’s Household is indispensable reading for scholars of early Christianity, the origins of religion, and the Roman Empire.”

      —Catherine Hezser Society of Biblical Literature


      “A valuable and compelling exploration of how a shard of fact was turned into a memory and elaborated into a legendary motif.”

      —Kyle Harper Church History


      “Flexsenhar’s monograph has provided a wealth of information about the history of imperial slavery as well as about how early Christians employed social memory to invent themselves.”

      —Isaac Blois Review of Biblical Literature



      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations

      Acknowledgments

      List of Abbreviations

      Introduction

      1 Paul, the Philippians, and Caesar’s Household (Phil 4:22)

      2 Paul, Peter, and Nero’s Slaves: Martyrdoms and Apostolic Acts

      3 Rome’s Imperial Household in Christian Polemic and Apologetic

      4 Christian Piety and a Martyred Slave of Caesar

      5 Material Evidence for a Christian Imperial Freedman

      6 Christians and Imperial Personnel in Rome’s Catacombs

      Conclusion: The Memory of Imperial Slavery in Early Christianity

      Appendixes

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

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