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Author Moss, Candida R.

Title The myth of persecution : how early Christians invented a story of martyrdom / Candida R. Moss.

Imprint New York : HarperOne, c2013.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 3rd Floor Stacks  272 M855m 2013    ---  Available
Edition 1st ed.
Description 308 p. ; 25 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. [263]-295) and index.
Contents Martyrdom before Christianity -- Christian borrowing of Jewish and pagan martyrdom traditions -- Inventing martyrs in early Christianity -- How persecuted were the early Christians? -- Why did the Romans dislike Christians? -- Myths about martyrs -- The invention of the persecuted church -- The dangerous legacy of a martyrdom complex.
Summary In The Myth of Persecution, Candida Moss, a leading expert on early Christianity, reveals how the early church exaggerated, invented, and forged stories of Christian martyrs and how the dangerous legacy of a martyrdom complex is employed today to silence dissent and galvanize a new generation of culture warriors. According to cherished church tradition and popular belief, before the Emperor Constantine made Christianity legal in the fourth century, early Christians were systematically persecuted by a brutal Roman Empire intent on their destruction. As the story goes, vast numbers of believers were thrown to the lions, tortured, or burned alive because they refused to renounce Christ. These saints, Christianity's inspirational heroes, are still venerated today.
Moss, however, exposes that the "Age of Martyrs" is a fiction - there was no sustained 300-year-long effort by the Romans to persecute Christians. Instead, these stories were pious exaggerations; highly stylized rewritings of Jewish, Greek, and Roman noble death traditions; and even forgeries designed to marginalize heretics, inspire the faithful, and fund churches.The traditional story of persecution is still taught in Sunday school classes, celebrated in sermons, and employed by church leaders, politicians, and media pundits who insist that Christians were - and always will be - persecuted by a hostile, secular world. While violence against Christians does occur in select parts of the world today, the rhetoric of persecution is both misleading and rooted in an inaccurate history of the early church. Moss urges modern Christians to abandon the conspiratorial assumption that the world is out to get Christians and, rather, embrace the consolation, moral instruction, and spiritual guidance that these martyrdom stories provide.
Subject Martyrdom -- Christianity.
Persecution.
Christianity and other religions.
ISBN 9780062104526 (hardback)
0062104527 (hardback)

 
    
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