The author
Guy G. Stroumsa is Professor Emeritus of the Study of the Abrahamic Religions at University of Oxford and Martin Buber Professor of Comparative Religion Emeritus at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He obtained his PhD from Harvard in 1978. Professor Stroumsa received a Doctor Honoris Causa from the University of Zurich in 2004, an Alexander von Humboldt Research Award in 2008, and a Chevalier dans l’Ordre du Merite in 2012. He is a member of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities.
Presentation
This book presents how ancient Christianity must be understood from the viewpoint of the history of religions in late antiquity. The continuation of biblical prophecy runs like a thread from Jesus through Mani to Muhammad. And yet this thread, arguably the single most important characteristic of the Abrahamic movement, often remains outside the mainstream, hidden, as it were, since it generates heresy. The figures of the Gnostic, the Holy man, and the mystic are all sequels of the Israelite prophet. They reflect a mode of religiosity that is characterized by high intensity. It is centripetal and activist by nature and emphasizes sectarianism and polemics, esoteric knowledge, or gnosis and charisma. The other mode of religiosity, obviously much more common than the first one, is centrifugal and irenic. It favors an ecumenical attitude, contents itself with a widely shared faith, or pistis, and reflects, in Weberian parlance, the routinization of the new religious movement. This is the mode of priests and bishops, rather than that of martyrs and holy men. These two main modes of religion, high versus low intensity, exist simultaneously, and cross the boundaries of religious communities. They offer a tool permitting us to follow the transformations of religion in late antiquity in general, and in ancient Christianity in particular, without becoming prisoners of the traditional categories of Patristic literature. Through the dialectical relationship between these two modes of religiosity, one can follow the complex transformations of ancient Christianity in its broad religious context.
Contents
Introduction: From Qumran to Koran: The Religious Worlds of Late Antiquity
Part I: Transformations of Religion in Late Antiquity
1. The End of Sacrifice
2. Patterns of Rationalization
Part II: The True Prophet
3. False Prophets of Early Christianity
4. False Prophet and False Messiah
5. Seal of the Prophets
Part III: Communities and God’s Law
6. Religious Dynamics between Jews and Christians
7. God’s Rule in Late Antiquity
Part IV: The Way to Mecca
8. Jewish-Christians and Islamic Origins
9. Christian Memories and Dreams of Jerusalem
10. Barbarians or Heretics?
Envoi: Conclusion: Athens, Jerusalem, Mecca: praeparatio coranica
(Credits Photo: Berthold Werner)