Who Were the First Christians?: Dismantling the Urban Thesis

Who Were the First Christians?: Dismantling the Urban Thesis

by Thomas A. Robinson
Who Were the First Christians?: Dismantling the Urban Thesis

Who Were the First Christians?: Dismantling the Urban Thesis

by Thomas A. Robinson

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Overview

It has been widely assumed that there were 6 million Christians (or 10% of the population of the Roman Empire) by around the year 300. The largely-unexamined consensus view is also that Christianity was an urban movement until the conversion of Emperor Constantine. On close examination, it appears that these two popular views would nearly saturate every urban area of the entire Roman Empire with Christians, leaving no room for Jews or pagans. In Who Were the First Christians?, Thomas Robinson shows that scenario simply does not work. But where does the solution lie? Were there many fewer Christians in the Roman world than we have thought? Was the Roman world much more urbanized? Or, is the urban thesis defective, so that the neglected countryside must now be considered in any reconstruction of early Christian growth? Further, what was the makeup of the typical Christian congregation? Was it a lower-class movement? Or was it a movement of the upwardly mobile middle-class? Arguing that more attention needs to be given to the countryside and to the considerable contingent of the marginal and the rustic within urban populations, this revisionist work argues persuasively that the urban thesis should be dismantled or profoundly revised and the growth and the complexion of the early Christian movement seen in a substantially different light.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190620561
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 11/01/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Thomas A. Robinson teaches courses in early Christianity, Greek language, and world religions at the University of Lethbridge. He received his PhD from McMaster University. His primary interests are the development of Christianity in the pre-Constantinian period and the interactions of the Christian movement with the Jewish and Greco-Roman options in the religious marketplace of the Roman Empire.

Table of Contents

Abbreviations Preface 1. Must Historians Count? 2. The "Urban" Thesis 3. Counting Romans and Christians 4. Counting the Jewish Population 5. Urban and Rural Relationships 6. Supposed Barriers to Christian Success 7. The Pre-Constantinian Evidence 8. Dismissing the Evidence of Christianity in the Countryside 9. The Country Bishop 10. Conclusion Appendixes A. The Numbers according to Ramsay MacMullen B. The Numbers according to Rodney Stark Bibliography Index
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