S T Ria Salvation In Early Christianity And Antiquity
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S t ria Salvation in Early Christianity and Antiquity
Author | : David du Toit,Christine Gerber,Christiane Zimmermann |
Publsiher | : BRILL |
Total Pages | : 705 |
Release | : 2019-07-01 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 9789004396883 |
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This volume, dedicated to Cilliers Breytenbach on the occasion of his 65th birthday, presents studies on salvation in the New Testament and other Early Christian writings as well as in the Hebrew and Greek Bible, the Death Sea Scrolls, Philo and Greco-Roman texts.
Redeemer Friend and Mother
Author | : Josephine Massyngberde Ford |
Publsiher | : Augsburg Fortress Publishing |
Total Pages | : 360 |
Release | : 1997 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : UOM:39015041014757 |
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How wide a range of ideas was used by early Christians to proclaim redemption through Jesus Christ? What did the followers of Jesus do about concepts of shame, death, suffering, forgiveness, and friendship? And how did their beliefs relate to the lives and thoughts of actual persons in the Graeco-Roman world including women? Author J. Massyngbaerde Ford opens a new vista on the ancient world of Bible times.
Rescue for the Dead
Author | : Jeffrey A. Trumbower |
Publsiher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 224 |
Release | : 2001-09-27 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 9780198032328 |
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Christianity is a religion of salvation in which believers have always anticipated post-mortem bliss for the faithful and non-salvation for others. Here, Trumbower examines how and why death came to be perceived as such a firm boundary of salvation. Analyzing exceptions to this principle from ancient Christianity, he finds that the principle itself was slow to develop and not universally accepted in the Christian movement's first four hundred years. In fact, only in the West was this principle definitively articulated, due in large part to the work and influence of Augustine.
Universal Salvation in Late Antiquity
Author | : Archbishop Michael Bland Simmons |
Publsiher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 536 |
Release | : 2015-05-26 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 9780190272845 |
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This study offers an in-depth examination of Porphyrian soteriology, or the concept of the salvation of the soul, in the thought of Porphyry of Tyre, whose significance for late antique thought is immense. Porphyry's concept of salvation is important for an understanding of those cataclysmic forces, not always theological, that helped convert the Roman Empire from paganism to Christianity. Porphyry, a disciple of Plotinus, was the last and greatest anti-Christian writer to vehemently attack the Church before the Constantinian revolution. His contribution to the pagan-Christian debate on universalism can thus shed light on the failure of paganism and the triumph of Christianity in late antiquity. In a broader historical and cultural context this study will address some of the issues central to the debate on universalism, in which Porphyry was passionately involved and which was becoming increasingly significant during the unprecedented series of economic, cultural, political, and military crises of the third century. As the author will argue, Porphyry may have failed to find one way of salvation for all humanity, he nonetheless arrived a hierarchical soteriology, something natural for a Neoplatonist, which resulted in an integrative religious and philosophical system. His system is examined in the context of other developing ideologies of universalism, during a period of unprecedented imperial crises, which were used by the emperors as an agent of political and religious unification. Christianity finally triumphed over its competitors owing to its being perceived to be the only universal salvation cult that was capable of bringing about this unification. In short, it won due to its unique universalist soteriology. By examining a rival to Christianity's concept of universal salvation, this book will be valuable to students and scholars of ancient philosophy, patristics, church history, and late antiquity.
Universal Salvation in Late Antiquity
Author | : Archbishop Michael Bland Simmons |
Publsiher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 496 |
Release | : 2015-04-28 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 9780190202408 |
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This study offers an in-depth examination of Porphyrian soteriology, or the concept of the salvation of the soul, in the thought of Porphyry of Tyre, whose significance for late antique thought is immense. Porphyry's concept of salvation is important for an understanding of those cataclysmic forces, not always theological, that helped convert the Roman Empire from paganism to Christianity. Porphyry, a disciple of Plotinus, was the last and greatest anti-Christian writer to vehemently attack the Church before the Constantinian revolution. His contribution to the pagan-Christian debate on universalism can thus shed light on the failure of paganism and the triumph of Christianity in late antiquity. In a broader historical and cultural context this study will address some of the issues central to the debate on universalism, in which Porphyry was passionately involved and which was becoming increasingly significant during the unprecedented series of economic, cultural, political, and military crises of the third century. As the author will argue, Porphyry may have failed to find one way of salvation for all humanity, he nonetheless arrived a hierarchical soteriology, something natural for a Neoplatonist, which resulted in an integrative religious and philosophical system. His system is examined in the context of other developing ideologies of universalism, during a period of unprecedented imperial crises, which were used by the emperors as an agent of political and religious unification. Christianity finally triumphed over its competitors owing to its being perceived to be the only universal salvation cult that was capable of bringing about this unification. In short, it won due to its unique universalist soteriology. By examining a rival to Christianity's concept of universal salvation, this book will be valuable to students and scholars of ancient philosophy, patristics, church history, and late antiquity.
Pilgrimage in Graeco Roman and Early Christian Antiquity
Author | : Jas' Elsner,Ian Rutherford |
Publsiher | : OUP Oxford |
Total Pages | : 532 |
Release | : 2006-01-05 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0199250790 |
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The essays in this volume examine the range of pilgrimage practices in Graeco-Roman antiquity and the early Church. From healing to oracles, from collective civic delegations to individual pilgrims seeking salvation, from localized sacred topographies to empire-wide travel, this book shows the importance of pilgrimage in pagan antiquity and its ancestry to later Christian practice.
Studies in Christian antiquity
Author | : Richard P.C. Hanson |
Publsiher | : Unknown |
Total Pages | : 135 |
Release | : 2024 |
Genre | : Electronic Book |
ISBN | : OCLC:1313687423 |
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Salvation is from the Jews John 4 22
Author | : Aaron Milavec |
Publsiher | : Liturgical Press |
Total Pages | : 228 |
Release | : 2007 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 0814659896 |
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Growing up in an ethnic suburb in Cleveland, Aaron Milavec was an impressionable adolescent whose religious and cultural influences made it natural for him to pity, blame, and despise Jews. All of that began to change in 1955 when Mr. Martin, a Jewish merchant, hired Milavec as a stock boy. Milavec's initial anxieties over working for a Jew surprisingly gave way to profound personal admiration. This, in turn, plunged Milavec into a troubling theological dilemma: How could God consign Mr. Martin to eternal hellfire due to his ancestral role in the death of Jesus when it was clear that Mr. Martin would not harm me, a Christian, even in small ways? This book is not for the faint-hearted. Most Christians imagine that the poison of anti-Judaism has been largely eliminated. In contrast, Milavec reveals how this poison has gone underground--disfiguring not only the role of Israel in God's plan of salvation but also horribly twisting the faith, the forgiveness, and the salvation that Christians find through Jesus Christ. This painful realization serves as the necessary first step for our healing. At each step of the way, Milavec's sure hand builds bridges of mutual understanding that enable both Christians and Jews to cross the chasm of distrust and distortion that has infected both church and synagogue over the centuries. In the end, Milavec securely brings his readers to that place where Rabbinic Judaism and Christianity can again be admired as sister religions intimately united to one other in God's drama of salvation.