ABSTRACT

Charting the first six hundred years of the Christian movement, THE EARLY CHRISTIAN CENTURIES carries the reader from the world of second-temple Judaism to the Byzantine age, the rise of Islam, and the beginnings of medieval European polities.With a combination of rare tact and acuity, Philip Rousseau  takes the measure of a generation of scholarship on early Christianity and the late Roman world. He stresses the importance of shifting historical consciousness, the continuity and development of ideas, and the urge for social respectability.  Paying the greatest attention to the 'inner' components of Christian life, the resulting story captures fully the major figures: Paul, the gospel writers, the early 'apologists', and the great figures of the 'patristic' age, including the Cappadocian Fathers, Augustine and Gregory the Great.

chapter Chapter 1|22 pages

Giving a Shape to Early Christian History

chapter Chapter 2|24 pages

Paul and the Jewish Past: An Apostle and his World

chapter Chapter 3|37 pages

Jesus of Nazareth: Portraits of a Saviour

chapter Chapter 4|40 pages

Individual Virtue and its Social Setting

chapter Chapter 5|29 pages

Churches as Learning Communities

chapter Chapter 6|34 pages

Heroes and Survivors: Christians Engage with the World

chapter Chapter 8|43 pages

A Crisis of Authority

chapter Chapter 9|33 pages

An Ancient Legacy and its Post-Roman Future

chapter |7 pages

Epilogue

The Price of Success