The History of Christianity: From the Disciples to the Dawn of the Reformation

(Rick Simeone) #1

Lecture 2: The First Cultural Context—Greece and Rome


o Technology was advanced in architecture (aqueducts, temples,
baths), warfare, and seafaring. Cities were large and crowded.
Slave labor supplied energy for mining, transportation,
farming, and household management.

o Politically, it was a world of empire (Parthian, Hellenistic,
Roman), with city-states (poleis) exercising greater and lesser
autonomy within provinces answerable to central authority.

•    Certain aspects of “Mediterranean culture” preceded and persisted
through changes of imperial rule.
o Society was stratified both at the larger level (with a small
nobility and a large slave class) and at the level of the
household; in both, male dominance prevailed.

o The practice of patronage (benefaction) served to mitigate
differences in status and wealth: Patrons gave benefits to
clients and clients responded with honor.

o Honor and shame were powerful motives for behavior at every
level, although the pertinent “court of opinion” could vary.

o The dominant religious system was polytheism, in which divine
power was distributed among personal beings of a higher order
who governed diverse aspects of the world. Interestingly, this
system mirrored the social world: The gods were the patrons
who provided benefits to humans, and humans were obligated
to pay honor and glory to the gods.

The Influence of Greek Civilization
• Alexander the Great’s conquest of the Mediterranean world
established the imprint of Greek civilization that endured for
centuries—in the East, over the entire 1,500 years covered by
this course.

•    Alexander’s vision was to extend the civilization of the classical
period of Athens to all of the known world so that there would be no
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