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Contents Introduction 7 Christians, Jews, and Roman Power Outi Lehtipuu & Michael Labahn Part I Jewish Communities in the Shadows of the Empire The Kittim and Hints of Hybridity in the Dead Sea Scrolls 17 The Politics of Exclusion 33 Μεμορια Iudati patiri 79 George J. Brooke, University of Manchester Expulsions of Jews and Others from Rome Birgit van der Lans, University of Groningen Some Notes to the Study of the Beginnings of Jewish Presence in Roman Pannonia Nóra Dávid, University of Vienna Part II Contextualizing New Testament Texts with the Empire Imperial Politics in Paul Scholarly Phantom or Actual Textual Phenomenon? Anders Klostergaard Petersen, University of Aarhus 101 Das Markusevangelium – eine ideologie- und imperiumskritische Schrift? 129 Ein Blick in die Auslegungsgeschichte Martin Meiser, Universität des Saarlandes „Ein Beispiel habe ich euch gegeben…“ (Joh 13,15) Die Diakonie Jesu und die Diakonie der Christen in der johanneischen Fußwaschungserzählung als Konterkarierung römischer Alltagskultur Klaus Scholtissek, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena 159 Part III Imperial Ideology and Other Early Christian Texts The Shepherd of Hermas and the Roman Empire 187 Noble Death or Death Cult? 205 Nero Redivivus as a Subject of Early Christian Arcane Teaching 229 A Selection of Ancient Sources 249 Mark R. C. Grundeken, Catholic University of Leuven Pagan Criticism of Early Christian Martyrdom Paul Middleton, University of Chester Marco Frenschkowski, University of Leipzig Introduction Christians, Jews, and Roman Power Outi Lehtipuu & Michael Labahn The Roman Empire forms the historical and cultural frame within which the emergence and rise of Christianity took place. From its beginnings in Galilee to its gradual expansion all over the Mediterranean, the early Christian movement was deeply embedded in the Roman world. The Roman Empire also played a vital role in the development of Judaism after Pompey appeared on the Palestinian “map” in 64/63 b.c.e. From that time, Rome became an economic and moreover a political factor that influenced political, religious, and cultural developments within Judaism. Finally, Roman military power forced Judaism to take new shape after the destruction of Jerusalem and its temple by Titus, the future emperor, in 70 c.e. Instead of seeing the formation of Judaism as a prior process to the birth of Christianity, as was often the case in traditional scholarship, several recent studies emphasize that the two religious traditions evolved in conjunction and in dialogue with each other. It took several decades, sometimes centuries, before outsiders were able to see them as separate movements. The Roman view on Christians and Jews was not always an outsider view. Another recent emphasis in early Christian studies relativizes the polarity between “Jewish” or “Christian” on the one side, and “Roman” on the other. These were not always mutually exclusive categories; according to Luke, a Roman centurion supported the building of the synagogue in Capernaum (Luke 7:5), and the apostle Paul held Roman citizenship (Acts 22:25-29) as did many later Christians and Jews. Moreover, both the developing Jewish and the nascent Christian movements shared the cultural vocabulary and concepts with their wider environment. Jewish and Christian discourses were part of the broader Hellenistic-Roman discursive world and can only be understood in relation to, not separate from, this context. The categories “Jewish”, “Christian”, and “Roman” were intertwined in several ways, and their meanings were defined and negotiated differently in various connections. From the present-day perspective, however, there is a profound difference between these categories: whereas both Judaism and Christianity are vibrant religious traditions, the Roman Empire no longer exists but belongs to the distant past. Perhaps for this reason, it is not always easy to 8 Outi Lehtipuu & Michael L abahn remember that the relations between the ruling power and the religious communities were not characterized by reciprocity and symmetry. Even though Judaism was officially recognized and given a special status that allowed Jews to follow their traditional practices, early Jewish and Christian communities were marginal groups that often did not attract any special attention from those in power. Most other inhabitants of Roman society probably did not encounter members of such obscure cults and were even unaware of their existence. There were, nonetheless, signs of mistrust and prejudice against outsiders that led to political or social pressure. This naturally varied according to time and place. The Roman presence was a reality in the lives of all inhabitants of the empire. In addition to administrative practices, such as taxation and census, and rituals associated with the cult of the emperor and other civic cults, Roman rule was understood as an oppressive power through the presence of its military. Roman rule was also seen and felt through its construction policy that produced baths, theatres, hippodromes, and other constructions and through other artefacts, such as statues raised to honor members of the imperial family and other prominent people or to Roman gods, coins, and inscriptions praising the emperor, calendars with months named after the ruling family, and even imperial milestones marking roads. How did this dominant ideology of the Roman Empire affect the everyday life of Jewish and Christian religious minority communities? The Christian proclamation about a “Son of God” who was the only true “ruler” and “savior” of the world served as an obvious challenge to the sovereignty of the emperor, but what were its practical consequences? Which word best describes the relations of ancient Judaism and early Christianity with the Roman Empire: antagonism, adaptation, or indifference? At least since the Religionsgeschichtliche Schule at the end of the nineteenth century, attention has been paid to the influence of Roman power on Jewish thinking and the formation of developing Christian movement(s). Nevertheless, other cultural and social factors became more dominant, which meant that no political interpretation of early Christianity and its writings was given – and only a few studies that dealt with the impact of Roman power have emerged. Moreover, a special interest in Roman power and its influence on Jesus and the early Christian movement has arisen in contemporary moments of political change and crisis. For example, the German student movement of the late 1970s and the political-religious orientation of the Reagan-Bush era in the United States encouraged investigations into the social and political aspects of the teaching of Jesus, the New Testament texts, and early Christian thinking. Since then, studies on the relations of Jewish and Introduc tion 9 early Christian writings concerning the imperial culture, ideology, and political as well as religious claims have been flourishing, mainly focussing on Jesus, Paul, the Gospel of Mark, and the Book of Revelation. However, other texts and movements are receiving increasing attention, and a wide range of hermeneutical methods are used, which makes “empire studies” one of the most innovative fields of research in early Christian and early Jewish studies. There are no simple answers to complex historical questions, nor is it possible to make exhaustive analyses of the vast phenomena involved in the study of the impact of Roman power politics on Christians and Jews. The task of the present volume is to show that the topic is more complicated than often assumed and that relations between the empire and the Jews and Christians living within its limits cannot simply be described in terms of conflict, clash, and opposition. As several recent studies have made clear, early Christianity and early Judaism were diverse movements that included various versions of how to be and live as a Christian or Jew. The attitudes toward the Empire also varied and differed both geographically and temporally. There is no such thing as the Christian or the Jewish response to imperial rule and ideology. The attitudes of peasants living in the Roman Galilee, for example, were not the same as those of the urban dwellers living outside of the region who wrote about them. The further the Jesus movement expanded, the more diversified it became, while reactions toward the Roman authorities proliferated. Moreover, the Roman world was no less diverse; the faces of the empire did not look the same for all its inhabitants. This profound diversity is mirrored in manifold ways in the ancient sources and is also reflected in the essays of this volume. This collection of essays offers insights into the relations of early Christians and Jews with the dominant Roman power. They address the question using different methodological approaches and studying a variety of sources, both literary and epigraphic. Most of these contributions are based on presentations given in the seminar Early Christianity between Judaism and Hellenism at several meetings of the European Association of Biblical Studies (in Tartu 2010, in Thessaloniki 2011, and in Amsterdam 2012). Together, they show how multiform and diffuse the phenomenon in question is. Three of the essays focus on Jewish communities living under Roman power. George Brooke (University of Manchester) discusses the use of the designation Kittim in the sectarian Dead Sea Scrolls. The word is usually understood as referring to the Seleucids, the Romans, or other military powers. Reading closely the relevant Qumran texts, such as Pesher Nahum, 10 Outi Lehtipuu & Michael L abahn Pesher Habakkuk, the War Scroll, and other texts, Brooke shows the ambivalent features related to the word; the Kittim are viewed both negatively and positively. This he explains by borrowing the concept of hybridity from post-colonial discourse. In addition, Brooke emphasizes the usefulness of the designation which can serve as a name for changing referents in changing historical circumstances. In her contribution on the expulsions of Jews and other groups from the Roman community, Birgit van den Lans (University of Groningen) expresses a contrasting view: what did the Romans think about the Jews and other expelled groups? Why did imperial Rome order Jews to be expelled from the city? What did it mean in practice? Earlier scholarship has taken the expulsions as signs of a general anti-Judaism, but a comparison with other expelled groups – such as Egyptians, astrologers, philosophers, and actors – suggests that they can be treated as part of Roman power politics, that is, promoting social order by means of rhetorical force. This means that the expulsions were not necessarily enforced but were manifestations of the boundaries of Romanness properly understood. Sources are suspiciously silent about any concrete actions taken against these groups. Moreover, the city limits were not specified and some of the expelled philosophers, for example, seem to have retreated to suburban areas. Even if not carried out in practice, the expulsion orders were an important means of constructing the proper Roman moral community. The third article focusing on a Jewish community is a study on the Jews in the Roman province of Pannonia by Nóra Dávid (University of Vienna, Institute for Jewish Studies). She discusses what can be known of the earliest Jewish settlers in the region based on the epigraphic evidence. A major methodological question is how an inscription can be identified as Jewish. A newly discovered inscription from Carnuntum that can be dated to the time before the Bar Kochba revolt in 135 c.e. suggests that there were Jewish inhabitants in the region earlier than is often presumed. However, it was during the Severan period (193-235 c.e.) that the presence of Jews in Pannonia intensified. Pannonia enjoyed a special status in the eyes of the Emperor Septimius Severus. When he was acclaimed emperor, he was the governor of Pannonia Superior and his Pannonian legions helped him in the consolidation of his power in the civilian wars between 193 and 197 c.e. As emperor, he granted the region a wide range of privileges and developed the province significantly. This encouraged new settlers, people from Judaea among them. The next three essays aim at contextualizing New Testament texts with the Roman Empire and its ideology. If Rome was an ever-present reality, Introduc tion 11 how is its presence reflected in the New Testament and the social practices of early Christians? Anders Klostergaard Petersen (University of Aarhus) analyzes Paul’s perspective on imperial politics, particularly the imperial cult, and asks whether it is the imperial cult that provides a relevant frame of reference for the study of Paul’s letters. Paying special attention to some apocalyptic passages in Paul’s letters, Petersen argues that many of the questions and problems of the contemporary debate on the New Testament and the imperial cult are already visible in Adolf Deissmann’s classic study of the subject (1911). While maintaining that “Paul and his peers would have had to be rather blind in order to overlook the omnipresence and ubiquity of the imperial cult” and, thus, acknowledging that the imperial cult and related practices offer an important contextual frame for Pauline texts, Petersen questions whether Paul’s letters exhibit a deliberate engagement with the cult and whether early Christ-followers attempted to create an anti-imperial ideology. The starting point for Martin Meiser (University of Saarland) is the Gospel of Mark. His particular viewpoint is the reception history of Mark’s text. If Mark’s gospel is critical toward the empire and its ideology, how was this criticism understood and continued in the texts of subsequent Christian writers? Meiser takes a closer look at three Markan texts: the beheading of John the Baptist (Mark 6:14-29), Jesus’s teaching on serving others (Mark 10:35-45), and the question about paying taxes (Mark 12:13-17). Strikingly, the early interpreters of these texts seldom understand them in political terms. The scene of the beheading of John the Baptist mainly arouses critical comments on luxury, and Jesus’s words on servitude are taken as an exhortation to personal humbleness. The criticism toward the empire also remains mild in the case of Jesus’s teaching concerning imperial taxes, as most commentators emphasize obedience and the duty to give Caesar what rightly belongs to Caesar. Klaus Scholtissek (University of Jena) studies the Gospel of John and particularly the foot washing scene in John 13. His analysis of the literary features of the text reveals the exemplary role of Jesus’s action for Christian diakonia. He places this finding into an imperial critical frame: by placing himself in the role of a slave, Jesus introduces a counter-cultural practice to the dominant imperial social practice. Much in line with Klostergaard Petersen’s argument, Scholtissek analyzes the Johannine thought world as mostly ignoring categories and practices of the Roman ruler cult, in contrast to studies that view the Fourth Gospel as a more critical reflection of Roman political power. According to Scholtissek, the anthropology, imagery, and ethics of the Fourth Gospel include universal elements and offer a variety 12 Outi Lehtipuu & Michael L abahn of connecting factors for different philosophical, cultural, and religious concepts. Although John seems to represent universal soteriology, it is worth asking whether even such an exclusive system as the Johannine narrative can work without being in critical dialogue with other systems of meaning, such as is represented by the emperor ideology. The last three contributions focus on other early Christian texts and on how they reflect the interactions between imperial ideology and the early Christian movement. Mark Grundeken (Catholic University of Leuven) deals with the Shepherd of Hermas, a text often excluded from studies on the relation between early Christianity and the Roman Empire. The text, however, was probably written during the second century in or near Rome, which means that its author must have experienced the influence of the empire in all aspects of its sociocultural, economic, and political life. Grundeken suggests that, compared to several contemporary texts, the views on Roman authorities in the Shepherd of Hermas are quite moderate. The supreme power of this world may rest with God, but the earthly rulers may rightly expect their Christian subjects to obey their laws. Confrontation, let alone active resistance, should be avoided. At the same time, however, Hermas’s criticism of idolatry and other features of the text seem to contain a hidden critique of the emperor veneration. These critical views can be seen as attempts to strengthen the identity of the Christian community. It is not possible to study the relations of early Christians and the Roman authorities without commenting on martyrdom. The topic is taken up by Paul Middleton (University of Chester), who investigates how non-Christian Romans viewed Christian martyrdom. While it is now generally recognized that prior to the middle of the third century, official actions taken against Christians were local, sporadic, and short-lived, experiences of suffering and being persecuted form an important part of several early Christian writings. Suffering was not only unavoidable, it was also a sign of true discipleship. Christians understood martyrs’ deaths as examples of heroic deeds which showed the courage, endurance, and bravery of the virtuous sufferers. They saw martyrdom in line with the Roman tradition of Noble Death, as exemplified by Socrates or those who died heroically in battle. Much to their puzzlement, non-Christians did not see the same nobility in Christian martyrdom. In pagan eyes, Christians were too eager to die, and their martyrdom was “too unreflective, too spectacular, and too messy”, not a solution to shame but rather a cause for shame. Thus, instead of Noble Death, martyrdom was considered a repulsive Death Cult. The collection closes with an essay by Marco Frenschkowski (University of Leipzig), who focuses on the legends of the emperor Nero, one of the Introduc tion 13 most fascinating Roman figures in the early Christian imagination. In non-Christian tradition, Nero had an ambivalent reputation but, in early Christian sources, he unambiguously became the epitome of evil. According to a popular belief, Nero would return to power after his death in 68 c.e., and sources depict several false Neros pretending to be the emperor leading rebellions. In Christian circles, Nero was often identified with the figure of the Antichrist, even though in some texts, Nero redivivus and the Antichrist are clearly two separate figures. Regardless of this, Nero still plays a role in the eschatological scenario. Revelations concerning Nero and other eschatological events was not open knowledge but rather part of arcane teaching often restricted to an inner circle of a few trusted individuals. According to Frenschkowski, this arcane character of the eschatological teaching might explain why so many early Christian writers so quickly forgot the role of Nero in the Revelation of John. A compilation of these essays would not have been possible without the co-operation of all our contributors, to whom we would like to express our sincere thanks. We are also grateful to Amsterdam University Press, especially to Simon Forde and Erin Thomas Dailey, for their willingness to accept our collection for publication and for their help in all practical matters. Last but not least, we would like to thank Christian Seppänen, who helped with technical editing and compiled the indexes.