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The End of Ancient Christianity
Paperback

The End of Ancient Christianity

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This study is concerned with one, central historical problem: the nature of the changes that transformed the intellectual and spiritual horizons of the Christian world from its establishment in the fourth century to the end of the sixth. Why, for example, were the assumptions, attitudes and traditions of Gregory the Great so markedly different from those of Augustine? The End of Ancient Christianity examines how Christians, who had formerly constituted a threatened and beleaguered minority, came to define their identity in a changed context of religious respectability in which their faith had become a source of privilege, prestige and power. Professor Markus reassesses the cult of the martyrs and the creation of schemes of sacred time and sacred space, and analyzes the appeal of asceticism and its impact on the Church at large. These changes form part of a fundamental transition, perhaps best described as the shift from Ancient toward Medieval forms of Christianity; from an older and more diverse secular culture towards a religious culture with a firm Biblical basis.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
31 January 1991
Pages
280
ISBN
9780521339490

This study is concerned with one, central historical problem: the nature of the changes that transformed the intellectual and spiritual horizons of the Christian world from its establishment in the fourth century to the end of the sixth. Why, for example, were the assumptions, attitudes and traditions of Gregory the Great so markedly different from those of Augustine? The End of Ancient Christianity examines how Christians, who had formerly constituted a threatened and beleaguered minority, came to define their identity in a changed context of religious respectability in which their faith had become a source of privilege, prestige and power. Professor Markus reassesses the cult of the martyrs and the creation of schemes of sacred time and sacred space, and analyzes the appeal of asceticism and its impact on the Church at large. These changes form part of a fundamental transition, perhaps best described as the shift from Ancient toward Medieval forms of Christianity; from an older and more diverse secular culture towards a religious culture with a firm Biblical basis.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
31 January 1991
Pages
280
ISBN
9780521339490