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Print Price: $30.50

Format:
Paperback
240 pp.
5.5" x 8.25"

ISBN-13:
9780190264406

Publication date:
October 2018

Imprint: OUP US


New Testament Christianity in the Roman World

Harry O. Maier

Series : Essentials of Biblical Studies

What did it mean to be a Christian in the Roman Empire? In one of the inaugural titles of Oxford's new Essentials in Biblical Studies series, Harry O. Maier considers the multilayered social contexts that shaped the authors and audiences of the New Testament. Beginning with the cosmos and the gods, Maier presents concentric realms of influence on the new religious movement of Christ-followers. The next is that of the empire itself and the sway the cult of the emperor held over believers of a single deity. Within the empire, early Christianity developed mostly in cities, the shape of which often influenced the form of belief. The family stood as the social unit in which daily expression of belief was most clearly on view and, finally, Maier examines the role of personal and individual adherence to the religion in the shaping of the Christian experience in the Roman world.

In all of these various realms, concepts of sacrifice, belief, patronage, poverty, Jewishness, integration into city life, and the social constitution of identity are explored as important facets of early Christianity as a lived religion. Maier encourages readers to think of early Christianity not simply as an abstract and disconnected set of beliefs and practices, but as made up of a host of social interactions and pluralisms. Religion thus ceases to exist as a single identity, and acts instead as a sphere in which myriad identities co-exist.

Readership : University students; seminary students; general readership interested in the Roman Empire and Christianity; general students of the New Testament.

List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Series Introduction
1. Introduction
2. The Gods and the Cosmos
3. The Emperor and the Empire
4. The City and Its Residents
5. The Household and Its Members
6. The Self and Others
Notes
Index

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Harry O. Maier is Professor of New Testament and Early Christian Studies at Vancouver School of Theology and Fellow of the Max Weber Center of Advanced Cultural and Social Studies at the University of Erfurt. His publications include Picturing Paul in Empire: Imperial Image, Text, and Persuasion in Colossians, Ephesians and the Pastoral Epistles.

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Special Features

  • Considers the Roman Empire's material role in the development of the New Testament and its audiences.
  • Examines the lived experience of Early Christians through the Cosmic, Global, Local, Household, and Personal realms.
  • Deconstructs religion as a single stable identify, considering the ways in which religion makes possible different and competing kinds of identity and meaning.