

An edition of The Parting of the Ways (2004)
The Roman Church As a Case Study (Interdisciplinary Studies in Ancient Culture and Religion, 5) (Interdisciplinary Studies in Ancient Culture and Religion, 5)
By Stephen Spence
Publish Date
July 2004
Publisher
Peeters Publishers
Language
eng
Pages
404
Description:
"This book seeks to inject into the general discussion of the "Parting of the Ways" of Judaism and Christianity the social realities of the separation of a particular Christian community and a particular Jewish community. By drawing upon the literary and the historical data available concerning the church in Rome, Spence seeks to discover when and how Christians came to see themselves as an identifiably distinct community. His findings will surprise those who see the "Parting of the Ways" as a slow process. He argues that although the "parting" was early, it was not without its complications. Drawing upon the work of Rodney Stark, a sociologist of religion, Spence suggests that within the church in Rome there was a struggle between those who saw the church as a Jewish sect and those who saw the church as a Roman cult - a struggle already under-way when the Apostle Paul wrote Romans. This struggle, however, was not an even one, because it was the cultists, those for whom the church's primary social location was the pagans of Rome, who held the positions of power over the numerically smaller sectarians who sought to maintain the church's primary identity as a Jewish sect acceptable within the synagogues of Rome."--BOOK JACKET.
subjects: Judaism, Christendom, Chrétiens juifs, Jodendom, Interfaith relations, Relations, Christianity, Église, Histoire religieuse, Church history, Christianity and other religions, History, Primitive and early church, Jewish Christians, Judaïsme, Histoire, Judenchristentum, Early church, Geschichte 30-600, Christianisme, Katholische Kirche, Rome (Italy), Religion, Origin