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Two thousand years ago, a seemingly insignificant movement began. Misunderstood, ridiculed and persecuted by the powerful of the day, this tiny group of “Jesus followers”, transformed by the resurrection of their leader, empowered by the Holy Spirit, began a movement which today is considered the world’s largest movement: Christianity. How was it done? How did a handful of men and women using a hodgepodge of methods lead to the conversion of the mighty Roman Empire? Are there lessons from this that the church can learn today? Most significantly, are there similarities between the evangelistic challenges the early Christians faced and the challenges we face in the world today? These are some of the fascinating questions this class will be exploring this fall. Sept 22 Sept 29 Oct 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Nov 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 The Greco-Roman World of Christianity The Uniqueness of Jesus in the Ancient World The Cost of Discipleship - Martyrdom (Brad Strelau) Creating a Caring Society: Compassion Evangelism (Andrew Demoline) Creating a New Identity: Worship in the Early Church Defending the Faith - Apologetics in the Ancient World Strange bedfellows: Church and the Empire (Mike Klassen) The 9-11 Moment of the Ancient World: Christianity and Rapid Change From Rome to Home - the challenges of evangelism today Week One: The Greco-Roman World of Early Christianity1 The growth of Christianity did not occur in a vacuum, but rather is rooted in historical events, in particular, the Person of Jesus of Nazareth and the event of his life, death, and resurrection. After his resurrection, two thousand years ago, a seemingly insignificant movement began. Misunderstood, ridiculed and persecuted by the powerful of the day, this tiny group of “Jesus followers”, transformed by the resurrection of their leader, empowered by the Holy Spirit, began a movement which today is considered the world’s largest movement: Christianity. Questions: • How was it done? • How did a handful of men and women using a hodgepodge of methods lead to the conversion of the mighty Roman Empire? • How did the Roman Empire view this growing movement? • Why didn’t they stop it? • How did the church continue to grow in the midst of such a prevalent and smothering culture as that of the Greco-Roman world? • Are there lessons from all this that the church can learn today? • Are there similarities between the challenges the early Christians faced and the challenges we face in the world today? • Are there practices that the early church carried out that today’s church needs to recover? These are some of the fascinating questions this class will be exploring. Introduction You find yourself transported by a time machine (or Dr. Who’s phone booth) into a first-century Jewish home in Jerusalem. Your host is part of the ruling class of Jews. What he shares with you might be surprising.2 For starters, your host speaks Greek, some Latin, and Aramaic (which, for the sake of imagination, you miraculously understand). His clothes are more Greek than Jewish, he possesses Roman citizenship, claims to follow the God of the Jews, but really has no time for the dietary laws…at least in a strict sense. In fact, looking at the table, the meal looks more like a banquet you might receive in Athens or Rome, not in a Jewish home in the first century. Silverware flashes, wine flows, and slaves busily move about attending to your every need. 1 Much of this lecture is drawn from two sources. Rikk Watts, The Christian Faith and the Ancient World in Christian Thought and Culture (Vancouver: Regent Audio, 2005) and Rodney Stark, The Rise of Christianity (New York: Harper One, 1996). 2 Drawn from James S. Jeffers, The Greco-Roman World of the New Testament Era: Exploring the Background of Early Christianity (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1999), 14-18. You look around the room and can’t help but notice that the room is decorated with pagan art from around the Mediterranean. Looking at your host’s library, you also notice a number of pagan authors. When he talks politics, his voice lowers a bit. Much of his concern is directed to the role of the Sanhedrin in relationship to the every-growing influence of the Roman power. He mentions the Jewish longing for independence, but then quickly changes the subject in case any of the slaves overhear what he is saying. How did he get to this place in life? Well, it’s a long story worth telling… He recalls the time when Judea was a prosperous, powerful, independent kingdom under King David and his successors. Sadly, all this came to an end when Israel was forced into exile under first, the Assyrian Empire, and then the Babylonian Empire. In fact, it was only when the Persians came on the scene that they were allowed to rebuild the Jewish temple in Jerusalem. That said, their independence was limited and they remained a client kingdom of the Persians for a long time, that is, until Alexander the Great began conquering everything in sight! One of Alexander’s successors set up what was called the Seleucid kingdom in the Near East whereas another successor (Ptolemy), took control of Egypt. (He also ruled Judea for many years until 198 BC, that is.) As a result, you look around and see the influences, such as the cities of the Decapolis. If you wanted to do business, then Greek was the lingua franca of the time. Everyone learned Greek, and along with this, people ended up learning (and appreciated) everything Greek - including culture and philosophy. Now as you look questioningly at your Jewish host, he sees your concern, but assures you that there really is a way to take the best from the Greeks while not falling into the idolatrous elements in the culture. With an air of pride, your host then informs you that the Jews during this time even successfully revolted from the Seleucids and set up an independent kingdom. First time this happened in centuries, he added. Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on your perspective), Rome came on the scene just over 100 years ago, and had been chipping away at the Hellenistic kingdoms for some time now. Finally, in the person of General Pompey, Rome came to Judea, and the Jews, recognizing that they really stood no chance militarily against the Romans, became a semi-independent client state of Rome. Your host adds that though this arrangement was not ideal, it still has brought some good benefits to the Jews. Your host then turns to fill you in on the Romans now. In many ways, culturally, they drew a lot from the Greeks. In fact, they really didn’t bring much culturally, but at least they held onto to some of the good things found in Hellenistic culture. As a republic, they were influenced by Greek philosophy. In fact, the politics of Rome was driven by what is called a patron-client relationship. A patron could exercise authority and control over his clients. If you conquered a people, then these people became your clients. The patron protected, but the clients served the patron. You could see how this could get a bit messed up though. Over time, the power shifted from senators in Rome to powerful generals like Sulla, Pompey and Julius Caesar. Now, the Romans were different from other conquering empires. They made it their business to incorporate the conquered people into Roman society (that is why I am a Roman citizen). Their target, of course, was bringing the elite in a conquered people on board. If you get the elite on board, then most likely the society will follow suit (such is the nature of the society). Oh, one more thing you need to know about the Romans: they’re tenacious. You can defeat them in battle over and over again, but they are never beaten. You can never ever get the best of them. And so, by 143 BC, Judea had voluntarily allied itself with Rome and as a result secured some pretty important rights: Our religion was officially recognized. What’s more, we don’t need to participate in Emperor worship, but could pay our annual tax to support the Jewish temple. That’s not so bad, is it? Now, your host turns to you with a smile. If you were me, what would you do? Fight against Rome? Impossible. Would you resist a power that is impossible to resist? Or that for the most part is tolerant of your beliefs and practices (though quite insensitive and lacking understanding)? Only if you are a fool, he laughs and pours you some more wine. The Christian Movement in the Greco-Roman World The Ancient City If we are to understand the conditions in which Christianity first took root, we need to get a clearer picture of the Greco-Roman world, and in particular what life was like in the cities of the Roman Empire. The city was first and foremost, the home of the local deity and it was from the identity of the local deity that the identity of the city was established. It was the deity of the city which originally gave identity to the tribes, families and clans in the city. Any sense of the individual was only given to the aristocracy and was only recognized insofar as individuals contributed to the polis. In the ancient world, the entire society was organized in a tribal manner; everything in city life was connected to the local deity. In the ancient world, the basis of all religion was power and immortality (not ethics or morality, for that was the realm of philosophy). As the gods went, Roma was a force to be reckoned with. To sum up, everything in the Roman world was characterized by religious observance. If you hated the local gods or the Roman gods, then you were accused of hating humanity. These were the very crimes that Christians were accused of carrying out. “Shortly after Pliny’s arrival in the city [Bithynia], a group of local citizens approached him to complain about Christians living in the vicinity. What precisely the complaint was we do not know, but from several hints in the letter it is possible to infer that the charge was brought by local merchants, perhaps butchers and others engaged in the slaughter and sale of sacrificial meat. Business was poor because people were not making sacrifices. Toward the end of the letter, written after Pliny had dealt with the problem, he observed that the ‘flesh of sacrificial victims is on sale everywhere, though up till recently scarcely anyone could be found to buy it.” Robert Louis Wilken, The Christians as the Romans Saw Them, 15 What was life in a Roman City like then? Not a splendorous thing. The Roman city was not a peaceful, spacious, multicultural affair. Originally, the cities were founded as fortresses with the walled area rarely surpassing 2 square miles. Within the city, life was nasty, brutish and short…and very, very cramped! Crowded Streets The streets were only 8-10 feet wide, and in most cases, there were just footpaths. Even the famous roads of Rome such as the Via Appia or the Via Latina were from 4.8 to 6.5 meters wide! Sanitation There were other poor devils who found their stairs too steep and the road to these dung pits too long, and to save themselves further trouble would empty the contents of their chamber pots from their heights into the streets. So much the worse for the passer-by who happened to intercept the unwelcome gift! One obvious issue connected to a dense population in the ancient city was the state of sanitation. Though historians have often marvelled over the aqueducts, public baths Jerome Carcopino and public latrines, what is left out is the fact that the latrines were often built next to public baths, and that even modern sewerage, garbage disposal and water systems would be stretched under such conditions. Within the ancient context, sanitation conditions were horrible. Rome, like all ancient cities, was dependent on the use of chamber pots and pit latrines. Often these pots were emptied out the windows onto unsuspecting pedestrians below. Water was mostly kept in cisterns which quickly became stagnant and undrinkable. Filled with feces and decay, the smell would be insufferable. No wonder the rich loved incense. Average street had mud and open sewers, manure, human excrement and dead bodies. Unsafe It was only because of the constant influx of new inhabitants that kept the cities alive (otherwise nobody would be left), and yet this constant influx contributed to the danger. Typically, in a city or neighbourhood (even today), the Night fell over the city like the shadow of a great higher the turnover, higher the danger, diffused, sinister, and menacing. Everyone crime rate. So, as night fled to his home, shut himself in, and barricaded the descended in the ancient city, entrance. The shops fell silent, safety chains were people barricaded themselves drawn behind the leaves of the doors….If the rich inside, for at night the criminal had to sally forth, they were accompanied by slaves reigned. The city would be divided into ethnic quarters walled off from each other and where suspicion and hostility, tension, riots were common. who carried torches to light and protect them on their way….Juvenal sighs that to go out to supper without having made your will was to expose yourself to reproach of carelessness… Jerome Carcopino In sum, Rodney Stark writes: Any accurate portrait of Antioch in New Testament times must depict a city filled with misery, danger, fear, despair, and hatred.” A city where the average family lived a squalid life in filthy and cramped quarters, whee at least half of the children died at birth or during infancy, and where most of the children who lived lost at least one parent before reaching maturity. A city filled with hatred and fear rooted in intense ethnic antagonisms and exacerbated by a constant stream of strangers. A city so lacking in stable networks of attachments that petty incidents could prompt mob violence. A city where crime flourished and the streets were dangerous at night. This was a world where its inhabitants desperately and deeply longed for some kind of relief, for any sign of hope, and indeed for salvation. Now, into this world, Christianity stepped! Christian Growth Projected at 40% per decade* Year Number of Christians Percent of the population 40 1000 0.0017 50 1400 0.0023 100 7530 0.0126 150 40496 0.07 200 217795 0.36 250 1171356 1.9 300 6299832 10.5 350 33882008 56.5 *Based on an estimated population of 60 million3 In many ways, this transformation occurred in an environment not unlike that of the postChristian West today. (In fact, as we journey along, we will discover just how similar the age of the early church is to our own.) How did it grow so large and influential that some forces within the Roman Empire felt it necessary to increasingly persecute this movement while other forces were eventually won over by Christ? How did this happen? Well, that’s what this class is going to be all about. Here are a few influences of early Christianity on the Roman Empire: 3 Rodney Stark, The Rise of Christianity (New York: Harper One, 1996), 7 Christianity offered a radically different view of what it meant to be human Women In the Greco-Roman world, the population was constantly shrinking. Why? There was an extreme shortage of females! It was estimated that there were 131 males per 100 females in the city of Rome, 140 males per 100 females in Italy, Asia Minor, and North Africa. The issue, of course, was that women were viewed as sub-human and therefore more likely to die of exposure. In fact, exposure and causing the death of female babies was legal (along with deformed males). In a typical Roman family, seldom was more than one daughter raised. Letter from a fellow named Hilarion to his pregnant wife, Alis: “Know that I am still in Alexandria. And do not worry if they all come back and I remain in Alexandria. I ask and beg you to take good care of our baby son, and as soon as I receive payment I shall send it up to you. If you are delivered of a child [before I come home], if it a boy keep it, if a girl discard it. You have sent me word, ‘Don’t forget me.’ How can I forget you. I beg you not to worry.” Abortion and forced abortion was also a major cause of death among women in the Roman Empire. Sewers clogged because of female babies. Same with the rubbish dumps. What’s more, whenever males outnumber females, something strange happens. Women begin to be viewed as “scarce goods” and become enclosed into repressive sex roles. Whenever women outnumber men, they tend to enjoy relatively greater freedom and power. Look at the Christian context. Paul, in his letter to the Romans, extends personal greetings to fifteen women and eighteen men. This would indicate a congregation that was predominantly female. Why were things so different? Prohibition of gender selection, infanticide and abortion. Women were more likely than men to become Christians Girls married much later in Christian context Women had greater say over who they married Christian condemnation of divorce, incest, marriage infidelity and polygamy. Remarriage was even discouraged Christians, like pagans, prized female chastity, but for Christians, this applied both ways!! Women held high offices in the church Jesus and Paul both spoke out for women. “Let us be clear. No movement on earth has been as supportive of women as has Christianity.” Rikk Watts. Children • Until named by father, baby had no status. • For Christians, life was God’s gift and children were made in God’s image. “Let the children come to me.” • Took care of not only their own children but also children of others. • Outbred the pagans Slaves Slaves were non-human and a high percentage of slaves were sexual slaves (male and female) Christian world was a radically different world for the slave: Both the Jewish Torah and Christian teaching was more merciful towards slaves partly because both Jews and Christians did not despise labour. Gen. 1 & 2. If you did not labour, you did not eat. For Christians, sex with a slave was seen as adultery (seen as human, made in the image of God). On Christian graves, there was no distinction between slaves and free. And in Christian circles, slaves and the free would partake of the Lord’s Supper together. Neither slave nor free in Christ. Many richer Christians let slaves go free at their own expenses Conclusion Christianity did not grow because of miracle working in the marketplaces (although there may have been much of that going on), or because Constantine said it should, or even because the martyrs gave it such credibility. It grew because Christians constituted an intense community, able to generate the ‘invincible obstinacy’ that so offended the younger Pliny but yielded immense religious rewards. And the primary means of its growth was through the united and motivated efforts of the growing numbers of Christian believers, who invited their friends, relatives, and neighbours to share the ‘good news.” Rodney Stark