Rome's rationale for persecuting the early church
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Rome's rationale for persecuting the early church

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152 pages 1996

About This Book

This is an MA Thesis that finally answered the thousand-year old mystery of why the Roman authorities persecuted Christianity. The author shows that the reason was something traditional historians dismissed a priori: that it was for Roman religious objections to Christian worship and proclamation, specifically, that the Christian worship of a crucified miscreant Jew as God, the faith in his physical resurrection, and the continued association with his "body" and spirit through the mass, violated a host of the most fundamental Greco-Roman taboos, and doing such were believed to anger and alienate the gods on whose favor the welfare of the empire depended.

The book also explains the sporadic nature of the persecutions before Decius (AD 250). The Romans simply waited for their gods to show their anger – such as by earthquakes, famines, conflagrations, floods, etc. – before setting out to purge the community of the albatross in their midst. When disaster struck, the gods were obviously angry, and oracles were quick to finger the Christians. When good times returned, the gods were obviously placated, and thus the persecutions could cease.

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