ABOUT THIS BOOKOrdinary people of antiquity interacted with the supernatural through a mosaic of beliefs and rituals. Exploring everyday life from 200 BCE to the end of the first century CE, Robert Knapp shows that Jews and polytheists lived with the gods in very similar ways. Traditional interactions provided stability even in times of crisis, while changing a relationship risked catastrophe for the individual, his family, and his community. However, people in both traditions did at times leave behind their long-honored rites to try something new. The Dawn of Christianity reveals why some people in Judea and then in the Roman and Greek worlds embraced a new approach to the forces and powers in their daily lives.
Knapp traces the emergence of Christianity from its stirrings in the eastern Mediterranean, where Jewish monotheism coexisted with polytheism and prayer mixed with magic. In a time receptive to prophetic messages and supernatural interventions, Jesus of Nazareth convinced people to change their beliefs by showing, through miracles, his direct connection to god-like power. The miracle of the Resurrection solidified Jesus’s supernatural credentials. After his death, followers continued to use miracles and magic to spread Jesus’s message of reward for the righteous in this life and immortality in the next.
Many Jews and polytheists strongly opposed the budding movement but despite major setbacks Christianity proved resilient and adaptable. It survived long enough to be saved by a second miracle, the conversion of Emperor Constantine. Hand in hand with empire, Christianity began its long march through history.
REVIEWSThis is a sound synthesis of historical data that, in broad strokes, paints the picture of how the nascent Christian movement influenced many different peoples and laid the foundations for Christianity to thrive globally.
-- Publishers Weekly
Following his highly acclaimed Invisible Romans, Robert Knapp returns to a topic that focuses once more on the lives of ordinary people in the Roman Empire. Based on extensive research using primary sources—inscriptions, papyri, and literary texts—The Dawn of Christianity makes vivid the relationship between humans and supernatural beings as experienced by polytheists and monotheists alike in the ancient Mediterranean world. Knapp offers a history that is often left murky by other modern authors who have written about the rise of the Jesus movement.
-- Susanna Elm, author of Sons of Hellenism, Fathers of the Church: Emperor Julian, Gregory of Nazianzus, and the Vision of Rome
Knapp’s The Dawn of Christianity is easily the best account of the subject available that I have come across. Written by a superb historian in an accessible and lively style, it will attract general readers and specialists alike.
-- Ramsay MacMullen, author of Christianizing the Roman Empire: A.D. 100–400
Knapp examines Christian sources to demonstrate the murky line between formal religious practice and the spiritual experience of ordinary people.
-- G. M. Smith Choice
This work challenges long-held explanations that are based on the primacy of Christianity’s theological aspect. Without discounting its significance, however, Knapp offers a more nuanced interpretation of how the message of Christianity complemented the movement’s primary advantage: the ability to offer, by show of miraculous power, a credible and more effective path toward negotiating the supernatural contingencies of a challenging and uncertain world.
-- Agana-Nsiire Agana Religious Studies Review
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Maps
Preface
Chapter 1. The Journey
Chapter 2. Polytheists, Jews and the Supernatural
Chapter 3. Ordinary Jewish People
Chapter 4. The Justice of Yahweh
Chapter 5. Polytheists in Their World
Chapter 6. Paths to Change
Chapter 7. Charismatics and Messiahs
Chapter 8. Christianity in the Jewish and Polytheistic World
Chapter 9. Hostility to Christianity
Chapter 10. Christianity’s Appeal: Magicians, Miracles and Martyrs
Chapter 11. When Prophecy Fails
Valedictory
Who’s Who and What’s What
Sources
Further Reading
Acknowledgements
List of Figures
List of Plate Illustrations
Notes
Index