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Blessed Victors: Theology of Persecution in the Third Century Church

Autor Dr. Ruth Sutcliffe
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 dec 2025
The late second through third centuries saw the remarkable confluence of the early church's developing identity, theological understanding and praxis, with a period of opposition and intermittent persecution from the world around it. Theology necessarily engaged with the persecution experience, as the church considered the goodness and providence of God, the Name to be confessed and the purposeful outcome of the antagonism they faced. Ruth Sutcliffe argues that the early fathers' theological understanding of the role of persecution in the Christian life informed their exhortations to individual and communal response, contributing to the church's remarkable survival and growth through this period.

Four great thinkers of this era - Clement and Origen of Alexandria and Tertullian and Cyprian of Carthage - each have much to contribute to a theological understanding of Christian persecution, and Sutcliffe explores their widely different perspectives, intellectual milieu and experiences. She explains these differences and similarities in terms of their use of the Scriptures, in conversation with their own contexts and agendas; concluding that their differences in approach to persecution can be explained theologically, and that these differences offer a unique window into their respective thought. Despite such differences, Sutcliffe stresses that the early church did have a fundamentally coherent "theology of persecution" which speaks to the worldwide church today.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780567710789
ISBN-10: 0567710785
Pagini: 298
Dimensiuni: 152 x 232 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Preface
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations

Introduction
Chapter 1: Clement of Alexandria: Progression to Perfection
Chapter 2: Origen of Alexandria: Purposeful Persecution
Chapter 3: Tertullian of Carthage: Pedantic Polemicist
Chapter 4: Cyprian of Carthage: Pragmatic Pastor
Chapter 5: Summa Diogmologica
Bibliography
Index


Recenzii

Timely and insightful. In Blessed Victors Sutcliffe makes a significant contribution to current debates about how best to understand ancient Christian martyrdom by situating the phenomenon in larger theological frameworks. Experts in the field and those more generally interested in the subject of persecution need this book.
Blessed Victors breaks new ground in the study of early Christian theology. It recovers the thought of four great early Christian teachers as they lived and led through persecution showing that fundamental Christian convictions led to persecution, but also sustained believers through that and were shaped by it. This fascinating and careful study demonstrates the continued relevance of voices from the Christian past.
By her detailed surveys of the treatment of martyrdom in four major Christian writers of the third century, Ruth Sutcliffe effectively responds to recent questioning its central role in Christian practice. Her analysis of Cyprian's efforts to deal with the effects of a well-documented persecution updates the prior scholarly literature and moves beyond it by the comparisons with the social contexts and religious perspectives of Clement, Origen, and Tertullian.
Given all that has been written on martyrdom, it's surprising that the theology of persecution has been so neglected. Sutcliffe situates these key early Greek and Latin authors in their contexts and deftly examines the similarities and differences in their thought. I hope this book will be read not only by those interested in early Christianity, but also by theologians who need to grapple with this significant area of doctrine.
[C]lear and persuasive ... [T]he individual chapters will be useful for students and specialists of the four selected Church Fathers ... while the concluding chapter will be valuable to a wide variety of scholars seeking to understand how a particularly reflective and well-educated subset of early Christians made sense of the suffering that their Christian identity entailed.