'Y^LIE-WMHYIEIESKirY" THE EVOLUTION OF EARLY CHRISTIANITY A GENETIC STUDY OF FIRST-CENTURY CHRISTIANITY IN RELATION TO ITS RELIGIOUS ENVIRONMENT By SHIRLEY JACKSON CASE of the Department of Neiv Testament and Early Christian Literature in the Uni'versity of Chicago THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Copyright 1914 By The University of Chicago All Rights Reserved Published September 1914 3 \-Vc Composed and Printed By The University of Chicafiro Press Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A. THE EVOLUTION OF EARLY CHRISTIANITY THE UNIVEESITY OF CHICAGO PRESS CHICAGO, ILLINOIS THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVEESITY PEE3S I.01IDON AND EDINBUSOH THE MAEUZEN-KABUSHIKI-KAISHA TOKYO, OSAKA, KYOTO KAEL W. HIEESEMANN LEIPZIG THE BAKEE & TAYLOE COMPANY NEW YOEK PREFACE This book does not aim to furnish a detailed account of the territorial, doctrinal, ecclesiastical, and literary developments of early Christianity. It seeks rather to analyze and interpret the environmental forces which stimulated, nourished, or directed the growth of the new religion. Consequently interest centers mainly in the lives of actual persons whose activities were related to a specific setting within which they worked out their various problems. This study, accordingly, deals primarily with the origins of the Christian movement and only secondarily with the writings which the movement produced, spo radically and sometimes quite incidentally, in the pro cess of expansion. Later generations have become so accustomed to think of the New Testament as the source of their religion that they with difficulty appre ciate the situation of the early Christians during that spontaneous and formative period when the champions of the new faith were performing their work without the aid of any distinctively Christian Scriptures. When the New Testament books were ultimately assembled they preserved records of Christian activity and thinking from diliferent localities and various periods, and so these writings constitute an important source of information for the study of Christian origins; but they render this service truly only when they are interpreted as the product of the movement of whose history they are a valuable though fragmentary record. Hence the student vi Preface of Christian origins must first orient himself in the life of the times, if he would understand the genesis of the new religion as well as the literature it produced. The possibiUty of obtaining this orientation has greatly increased in recent years. Much help may now be derived from the historical study of religions as a whole, which supphes certain broad principles capable of general application. These results emphasize the necessity of taking account of psychological processes in the rise and development of all rehgions, and they make clear the importance of social and cultural forces for the determination of religious phenomena. But more immediate help comes from observing the actual historical situation in which the early Christians Uved. Within the last half-century various scholars have devoted themselves to the study of later Judaism, with the result that the historian can now know, for the most part, the actual religious situation which conditioned the Uves of the first disciples on Jewish soil. But only in its veriest beginnings was Christianity confined to a strictly Jewish setting. Even before the earUest extant New Testament book was written the advocates of the new movement were using the Greek speech of the gentile world; perhaps by the middle of the first century Christians outside of Palestine were more numerous than those residing in the Holy Land; and certainly the membership of many gentile churches was constituted largely of persons whose youthful reUgious training had been received in some heathen faith. From an early date the cultural, social, and reU gious environment of Christians had been distinctly Hellenistic, consequently some students of Christian Preface vii origins have recently insisted upon the necessity of greater famiUarity with the HeUenistic setting of the new religion. As yet this particular field has received all too Uttle attention. Indeed, it is not uncommon even today to find its rights to consideration either denied, or ignored, or greatly mimmized. The difficulties of the subject are many, for the sources of information are not readily available. They are vast in extent and are scattered through thousands of pages of Greek and Latin authors, inscriptions, and papyri — not to mention Semitic docu ments. While some excellent pioneer work has already been done, there are no books treating the Hellenistic environment of the early Christians in the same com prehensive way that Schiirer and numerous other writers expound the Jewish setting. It is in this less-worked field that the present volume aims to render its chief service. The book is necessarily introductory in character, mainly emphasizing a point of view and a method of procedure. It will have ful filled its intended mission if it has demonstrated the importance of this Une of study, if it has made clear the general course to be pursued in such inquiry, and if it has helped in any degree to a better understanding of the vital character of primitive Christianity. Shirley Jackson Case University of Chicago August 12, 19 14 TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I. The Developmental Nature of Christianity i II. The Importance of Environment for Christian • Origins 26 III. The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times . 48 IV. The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 78 V. The Breach betviteen Christians and Jews . 123 ,/VI. The Early Christians' Contact with Gentile Religions .... .166 VII. The Religious Significance of Emperor-Worship 195 VIII. The Religious Significance of Philosophical Speculation .... 239 ^ IX. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 284 X. The Triumph of Christianity . 331 CHAPTER I THE DEVELOPMENTAL NATURE OF CHRISTIANITY The Christian reUgion has undergone numerous changes in the course of its history. Not only has its form in one period differed from that of a subsequent age, but diflerent groups of people within the same period have become exponents of varying types of faith. As a consequence of these variations, modern Chris tianity in its totaUty is a widely diversified phenomenon. The Greek and the Roman churches have many distinc tive features; Protestantism is sharply differentiated from CathoUeism; Protestant denominations differ more or less widely from one another, and divergent tendencies may often be observed among members of the same communion. These variations, which have persisted in spite of many attempts to estabUsh or maintain uniformity, seem to imply that Christianity is primarily an affair of life, with varying characteristics according to the individuals and the circumstances which have deter mined its historical manifestation. As each new generation reacts upon its peculiar world of reaUty, appropriating data from the past and attaining new experiences in the present, its religious activities show new and varying characteristics. While Christians may preserve a keen sense of historical continuity and may acknowledge large obUgations to the past, in the last analysis their reUgion is identical with the spiritual attainments of different individuals, or groups 2 The EvoluHon oJ H^any (^nrisiiamty of individuals, whose experience, conduct, and thinking have been very effectively influenced by immediate sur roundings. Since Christianity is thus fundamentally an expression of spiritual life evolved under specific con ditions in successive periods of history, its form naturally varies with the changing circumstances of life. But change, instead of being made a primary item in Christianity's nature, is usually thought to be quite incidental, or even detrimental, to its true character. Its fundamental constitution is commonly seen in some static quantity of experience, doctrine, conduct, or ritual which is assumed to have been established in the days of Jesus and the apostles, and to be reproduced in all other circles where this faith is maintained in its purity. The fact of variation is disposed of by setting aside as spurious all phases not in agreement with some particular type which its devotees call "genuine." Or, if more generously inclined, one may find the essentials of Christianity in a modicum so small and so broadly defined that it can be thought to exist in several differ ent communities where variations in other respects may be very pronounced. Beneath all differences there is a static quantity called "essence," while all divergent phenomena are merely excrescences. This situation suggests a crucial problem. Is Chris tianity ultimately vital and developmental in nature, or is it static and quantitative ? This question is funda mental to any study of the new religion's origin, and especially to the problem of its relation to other faiths in the world in which it arose. Hence the necessity of ascertaining at the outset the view of Christianity's nature according to which our interpretation of the early The Developmental Nature of Christianity 3 evolution of the new religion is to proceed. If we think of it as vitally developmental, a genuine growth, the circumstances surrounding the lives of its earUest advo cates must form an important consideration in the inter pretation of its history. If, on the other hand, it is treated as a static quantity whose essential character and content are fixed at the start, the question of rela tionship to other faiths is not fundamentally important. This question may have a secondary interest because of its bearing upon external matters, but it has essentially nothing to do with an understanding of Christianity's real genius. To which of these two main positions is the preference to be given? The static character of Christianity has been maintained from an early date in both Catholic and Protestant circles. Orthodox Romanists have always defined their religion in terms of a God-given quantum of revelation, original in content, complete at the outset, and historically unconditioned except that its completeness and perfection were displayed more fully in the expanding life of the historic church. Changes may be admitted in the course of history, even changes necessitated by contemporary conditions, but Christianity is not in any real sense a product of evolu tionary forces. This assertion applies even to its rela tion to Judaism. While Christianity is assumed to preserve everything of permanent worth in the latter, the relation of the two is not one of organic evolution. Christianity is really a new and fuller revelation, a fresh divine insert into history, for which Judaism has merely prepared the way. In the course of subsequent history popular pagan religion may have affected somewhat 4 The Evolution oj iLany ^nnsiianiiy the church's rites and ceremonies, and Greek philosophy may have had some influence upon the development of doctrine, but it is a gross error, according to the Catholic view, to think of these outside forces as introducing anything in the least alien to the original substance of the Christian revelation. Historical growth is but the further unfolding of the heavenly robe brought to earth by Jesus, passed on by him to the apostles, and intrusted by them to the divinely established and officered church. The garment never needs to be altered or repaired, but only to be further unfolded.' The older Protestant estimate of Christianity's nature rested upon the same basic principle. The new religion as revealed by Jesus and perpetuated by the apostles was a purely divine deposit, essentially complete from the first. The fundamental divergence between Protestantism and Catholicism lay in their different theories about the preservation of the deposit. According to the latter the infallible church was its perpetual guardian and interpreter, consequently the whole ecclesiastical development within orthodox Ro manism was the continuation of genuinely original Christianity. The Protestant Reformers, on the other hand, took the Scriptures rather than the church as their ultimate authority, and so found original Chris tianity in the Canon. It could be recovered only by a return to the age of the apostles, its divine character being assured by an infaUible Scripture. Thus Storrs ' Cf. articles "Christianity," "Development of Doctrine," and "Revelation" in the Catholic Encyclopedia (New York, 1907 ff.) and the article "figlise" in Dictionnaire de iheologie catholique (Tome IV, Paris, 1911). The Developmental Nature of Christianity 5 in his lectures on The Divine Origin of Christianity^ says of the New Testament books that they hold Christianity as nothing else does. While it has been "variously tinted and refracted" by human representations of it, still these primitive writings continue to reveal its spirit ual substance and vital force. They are our inheritance from God, and this faith "is the one system of religion on earth for which the eternal creative spirit, from whom the spirit of man is derived, is directly responsible, and to which his veracity is pledged" (p. 6). This did not mean that ecclesiastical organization and doctrinal elaboration were thought by Protestants to form no part of Christianity. On the contrary, many features which emerge in post-apostolic times were regarded as legitimate because believed to be scriptural. Thus AngUcans could retain the notion that the church is a supernatural organization, divinely equipped to administer the rites of salvation. Though inculcating only that which is "agreeable to the doctrine of the Old and New Testaments and which the CathoUc Fathers and ancient bishops have collected from that very doctrine,"^ still according to a canon of 1604 the Church of England differs from the Catholics only "in those particular points wherein they were fallen both from themselves in their ancient integrity and from the apostolic churches which were their first founders." According to this conception Christianity is still, as in CathoUeism, a purely supernatural contribution to ¦ Boston, 1884. ' Cited from the Convocation of 1571, by A. C. A. Hall in the article "Protestantism" in the New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia, Vol. IX (New York, 1911). 6 The Evolution oj Early cnnsitan'Hy human history, its integrity being carefuUy preserved within divinely determined limits. Other sections of Protestantism attached less signifi cance to the perpetuation of the divinely authorized ecclesiastical organization and placed chief stress upon individual religious life. Yet Christianity was a signifi cant historical quantum, more especially on its doc trinal side. While Scripture was the ultimate norm for faith, much genuine Christianity was to be recognized in the doctrinal development of post-apostolic times. This position has been stated more recently by Orr. He believes "the labor spent by myriads of minds on the fashioning of dogma has not, as so many in our day seem to think, been utterly fatuous, and the mere forging of fetters for the human spirit.'" This work of doctrinal elaboration has not been a merely human affair, but has been pursued in agreement with the divine character and intention of Christianity. The general tendency of this type of interpretation is to define Christianity's essential content in terms of a divinely directed type of metaphysical speculation guaranteed in the first instance by the teaching of Jesus and the apostles. The exposi tion of sound doctrine never goes beyond this original revelation, nor are the intellectual attainments of a later age ever able to import anything essentially new into its content. If a contribution is new it must in the nature of the case be untrue. The function of interpretation is only to expound in greater detail the perfect original. These various opinions of both Catholics and Protes tants are in fundamental agreement on the question of ' The Progress of Dogma (New York, 1901), p. v. The Developmental Nature of Christianity 7 Christianity's nature. It is a quantity of divine instruc tion, supernaturally given and designed to cover all the essentials of true religion. Whether it is more perfectly preserved in an ecclesiastical organization, in a canon of Scripture, in a system of metaphysical speculation, or in some combination of these is only a subsidiary question. In any case it has a truly other-worldly origin and maintains its unique originaUty in every legitimate stage of its career. Human experience and historical circumstances contribute nothing to its making; they merely provide channels for its spread, in so far as they do not obscure or retard its progress. The nineteenth century witnessed a general expansion of man's mental horizon and with it came a keener sense of real connection between earlier and later periods of history. Scholars became more vitally conscious of progression in the course of human experience, so that the notion of development entered by degrees into the realm of historical study. Religion was naturally tardy in accepting and appl3dng to itself the conception of evo lution, yet some scholars. Catholic as well as Protestant, recognized that the older method of interpretation did not do full justice to the developmental side of Christian ity. The changes through which it had passed were felt to be more extensive and thoroughgoing than were pos sible on the traditional view. Cardinal Newman, from the side of Catholicism, recognized the pressure of this demand and sought to meet it in his Essay on the Develop ment of Christian Doctrine.^ He is more generous than most of his Catholic predecessors in finding extensive changes in the history of doctrine, a fact which, he says, ' London, 1845, 1894'. 8 The Evolution oj Early (.^nrisiianwy "embarrasses us when we consult history for the true idea of Christianity." While it is a supernaturaUy re vealed religion, its historical manifestation is humanly conditioned and so is subject to "the general method by which the course of things is carried forward." Have we here a new conception of Christianity's nature according to which it becomes a product of reUgious life rather than a divine insert into history? Such might, at first sight, seem to be the case, but Newman very quickly assures his readers that this is not his thought. No matter how extensively Chris tianity may appear humanly conditioned, "the powers which it wields and the words which proceed out of its mouth attest its miraculous nativity." Furthermore, no phases of development are legitimate which do not ultimately fall within the pale of ecclesiastical sanction, and these "natural" and "true" developments were aU contemplated by Christianity's author, "who in design ing the work designed its legitimate results." Security against error and perversion is obtained by the main tenance of the original type which has remained from first to last unalterable. Thus it is apparent that Newman does not really beUeve it is Christianity's nature to evolve, at least not in the sense of genuine, organic evolution. Changes in its history do not inhere primarily in its character as a reUgion, but are due to the medium through which it is compelled to work. Variation is necessary only be cause it is the inevitable attendant of "any philosophy or polity which takes possession of the intellect and heart" ; it is in the nature of the human mind that " time is necessary for the full comprehension and perfection The Developmental Nature of Christianity g of great ideas and that the highest and most wonderful truths, though communicated to the world once for all by inspired teachers, could not be comprehended all at once by the recipients .... but have required only the longer time and deeper thought for their full eluci dation." Thus it is not essential Christianity which evolves but only its historical elucidation, and the two things are in reality treated as separate entities. After aU, Newman signally fails to find any vital place for the conception of growth as fundamental to Christianity's nature. Among Protestants the problem of development was approached from a different angle. Nevraian had been compelled to face this question in order to legitimize the history of the church in which change and variation no longer could be denied. If the authority of the ecclesiastical organization was to be maintained, the notion of development must be admitted into Christian ity far enough to cover the changes which time had wrought in the outward history of the church. Protes tants, on the other hand, except those Anglicans who swung far toward Rome in their reaction against liberal ism — a movement of which Newman was a leader before his outright adoption of Catholicism — easily dismissed all ecclesiastical developments as mere perversions of true Christianity. Its history was not a vital growth, but a process of degeneration and decay. The problem of so defining Christianity as to give the notion of development any important place in the definition did not become a real issue for Protestant scholars until they felt it desirable to bring religion into more vital relations with the historic life of the human spirit and IO The Evolution of Early Christianity to recognize that the New Testament, which had con stituted the Protestant norm for faith, was itself the product of growth. A tendency to ally religion more closely with human ity, and so to make it less a thing from without, early appeared in EngUsh deism and German rationalism. But these movements were more negative than positive in their results. They denied to Christianity much that had traditionally been regarded as essential to its nature, without formulating a new definition of its character with a view to displaying the real genius of its historical development. But German ideaUsm, especially as expounded by Hegel, made an effort to supply this needed definition. For him the universe is at heart spiritual, or perhaps better, intellectual, being grounded in the divine Idea, the absolute Reason, whose essential nature consists in living development. Ideally the world is the very product of this development of the logical thought of the absolute spirit. Since thought and being are thus a unit, philosophical dialectic repro duces, at least in kind, the evolutionary process of the absolute, and every historic product of the human spirit i — custom, law, art, science, philosophy, reUgion — is a more or less perfect expression of the absolute. Progress is the result of conflict and discord in the general trend of all things which are synthetically evolving nearer and nearer to the divine Idea, itself the ultimate and absolute truth. Similarly in the realm of religion every new stage in the development of the human spirit marks a new revelation of divine truth. What, then, is the HegeUan understanding of Chris tianity's nature ? Seemingly the notion of development, The Developmental Nature of Christianity ii not only in externals but also in essentials, has been made central. Closer inspection, however, shows that even this mode of interpretation does not find Chris tianity to have been so thoroughly developmental, a process of vital historical growth, as might at first sight be imagined. To begin with, Hegel had little interest in the historical life of Christianity as a whole. His primary concern was with doctrine only. Nor did he view this in its entirety; much less was he interested in its actual historical growth. In closing his lectures on the philosophy of religion' he affirms that his aim has been "to reconcile reason and religion, to show how we know this latter to be in all its manifold forms neces sary, and to rediscover in revealed religion the truth and the idea." In other words, he is concerned with supposed abstract elements of universality in Chris tianity rather than with its concrete phenomena, and he discovers the universal through a process of philo sophical reflection acting upon the content of religious ideas. The vital situations out of which these ideas come are not made the norm for estimating their char acter. That is determined by relating them to the imaginary absolute. Accordingly, Hegel can say of the religious situation in his own day that "philosophy which is theology is solely concerned with showing the rationality of religion," and so "forms a sanctuary apart and those who serve in it constitute an isolated order of priests who must not mix with the world and whose work is to protect the possessions of truth." This is not the attitude of one who thinks Christianity ' Vorksungen Uber die Philosophie der Religion (Berlin, 1832, 1840'), English tr.. Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion (London, 1895). 12 The Evolution of Early Christianity a genuine product of vital historical forces. It is, on the contrary, ultimately an esoteric philosophy con structed according to a pre-arranged divine pattern called the Absolute. Thus interpreted Christianity is ultimately unde- velopmental. The human attainment of truth is, in deed, an evolutionary process, but the real content and substance of that truth are determined from without. The growth of Christianity, as a historical phenomenon, is recognized, but it is not a purely spontaneous growth, since it must conform to a model called the Absolute which fixes the goal before the process of development begins. Thus Christianity is essentiaUy the reproduc tion of a set of ideas divinely determined beforehand. Man's struggle to attain them may be long and laborious, but they are in no true sense a product of his struggle.'^ He is able to grasp them because of the fortunate cir cumstance that he is made in their image; he is never to be regarded as their creator. Newman, we found, restricted the notion of development to the historical elucidation of Christianity, leaving its essential content quite untouched by conditions of historical growth. Hegel applied the principle of development more rigor ously to the method by which man attains the essential in religion, but he still defined that essence as an inde pendent entity, the Absolute, whose real content was not in the least determined by the developmental forces of history. Hegel's neglect of historical phenomena was recog nized even by his followers, and they early attempted i an appUcation of his philosophical principles to the specific data of Christianity, especially in reference to The Developmental Nature of Christianity 13 the origins of dogma. F. C. Baur,' and the members of the Tubingen school in general, found early Christianity to be a development out of specific, conflicting historical forces. The Jewish particularism of the Palestinian community on the one hand, and PauUne universaUsm on the other were finally synthesized through an evo lutionary process into early Catholicism, and the books of the New Testament were thought to represent differ ent points of view emerging in the course of the contro versy. Although Baur's procedure thus approximated to a truly scientific historical method — a fact not always appreciated by critics of the Tiibingen school — he con fined attention so exclusively to the intellectual side of human activity, neglecting its emotional and volitional phases, that his conception of Christianity's content was not sufficiently comprehensive. He did maintain in a more realistic way than Hegel had done that human ideas and historical events are closely interwoven. Hence early Christianity, on its doctrinal side, was more vitally developmental, but its ultimate essence was still defined in terms of the Hegelian doctrine of the Abso lute, and, therefore, necessarily remained undevelop- mental in the last analysis. In more recent years the Hegelian interpretation of Christianity has been considerably modified, especially in the direction of recognizing more fully its concrete, historical character. Accordingly, the Absolute be comes less a predetermined quantum and more a prod uct of historical growth. Troeltsch, for example, maintains that the Christian religion is to be placed ' See in this connection his Das Christentum und die christUche Kirche der drei ersten Jahrhunderte (Tubingen, 1853, 1860^). 14 The Evolution of Early Christianity side by side with other faiths, and is to be studied by the same general scientific method of investigation. Since they must be treated as normal evolutionary developments in the life of humanity, so it must be viewed as a strictly historical evolution. If it is to take precedence over other religions its supremacy can be maintained solely on the ground of actual merit histori cally demonstrated. It appears, however, that Chris tianity as a matter of fact is the best religion, and so has a just claim to the title "absolute." As yet its com plete finality may not be fully estabUshed, but its devel opment is surely moving toward this end. Enough of its distinctive characteristics have already emerged to furnish adequate ground for faith in its ultimate abso luteness. So Troeltsch can speak of an "essential" Christianity in whose history the fundamental "ideal" is being realized through progress toward the "absolute goal.'" Idealistic philosophy, even in this form, does not supply a vitally developmental conception of Chris tianity's nature. While a process of evolution is recog nized, it is supposed to issue in an Absolute no longer subject to the laws of growth. Thus the more essen tial phases of Christianity have already become static, and when the process of development has reached a further stage it wiU result in fixing a comparatively complete quantitative entity which wiU transcend the historic evolution by which it is said to have been ' See his Die Absohitheit des Chrisientums und die Religionsgeschichie (Tubingen, 1902, 1912'); also articles "Dogmatik" and "Glaube und Geschichte" in Die Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart, II (Tubingen,, 1910); and "The Dogmatics of the religions geschichtliche Schule," American Journal of Theology, XVII (1913), 1-21. The Developmental Nature of Christianity 15 produced. Even if this outcome were possible, how could a result be called "absolute" unless an external criterion were applied for determining the ultimate ? So long as history is being made — and it is vain to theorize about a time when history will cease to be in the making — it is quite impossible to be certain that an ideal goal has been reached at any particular stage of religious life. Certain results attained may be exceptionally valuable, but according to a genuinely developmental conception of life these attainments cannot be called completely ideal and absolute. In fact such terms are not consonant with the notion of vital growth. From this point of view all objective items are merely the product of certain religious activities on the part of individuals who may attempt to make their attain ments serviceable for future generations by labeling these results "ideal" and "absolute." But the only ideal which true development knows is the necessity of constantly striving to produce a genuine religious Ufe in each new generation which shall not only emulate the past but shall endeavor to transcend all previous so-called ideals. Even to say that certain past attain ments have not yet been transcended does not alter the situation. It is still, and always will be, the business of a truly developmental and vital religion to strive, nor can any limit be fixed beyond which it may be said that striving becomes useless. This does not imply a depreciation of the past, but only the abandonment of the Platonic Absolute in favor of a strictly empirical criterion for estimating the worth of reUgious values. Another mode of thinking, which received a strong impetus from Herder and Schleiermacher, which was 1 6 The Evolution of Early Christianity adopted by Rjiadll, and which has become widely prevalent, especially among the so-caUed modern "liberal" theologians, has exerted an important influ ence upon the definition of Christianity's nature. Although representatives of this view commonly hold to some form of belief in an Absolute, they do not attach primary worth to philosophical formulation of dogma, but place chief stress upon personal religious experience. They define Christianity mainly as a type of experience realized within the community of beUevers. While absolute identity of experience for all members of the community cannot be affirmed, there is supposed to be a common element sufficiently representative to constitute the essence of Christianity, and to furnish a basis for belief in its distinctiveness and finality. Schleiermacher advocated essentially this position when he defined religion as a "feeling of dependence," a consciousness of the individual's relation to Deity. Christianity, however, he regarded as a genuine product of the human spirit rather than a new divine insert into life. Man has been so created that spiritual growth is a fundamental law of his constitution; in fact, all spiritual life has its ground in the creative purpose of God, who by hidden laws effects a revelation of himself, now dimly, now brightly, through the medium of earthly individuals but supremely in the person of Jesus. Thus even Jesus' God-consciousness is fundamentally a personal attainment on his part, reached through the normal exercise of his own spiritual personality. Simi larly believers, while availing themselves of historical means of grace, must find the essential content of re ligion in a personal experience of God, worked out in The Developmental Nature of Christianity 17 accordance with the inherent capabilities of the indi vidual. The help which comes from without does not create religion, but only stimulates and brings to fruitage powers already latent in man. On this interpretation Christianity is developmental, but only in a restricted sense of the term. There is development in the personal attainment of experi ence, yet this experience is conditioned by an original supernatural endowment bestowed upon humanity at creation. Moreover, the perfect embodiment of the God-consciousness in the person of Jesus is a norm for determining the true character and content of experi ence. Thus, ultimately, Christianity is supernaturally conditioned and is made to conform to an objective cri terion, so that the process of growth pertains only to the working-out of these given data in the religious Ufe of the individual and of the community. Furthermore, Schleiermacher paid little attention to the historical career of Christianity. He generally ignored the influ ence of varying local conditions and contemporary thinking as possible factors influencing religious experi ence in successive periods of history. To Ritschl' the need of treating Christianity in a more strictly historical fashion appealed more strongly. This seemingly was an inheritance from his earlier training in the Tubingen school. He followed Schleiermacher, however, in defining religion as man's sense of depend ence upon God. Christianity more specifically is the reUgion in which the God-consciousness is most truly realized because of the revelation of God in Christ. 'See particularly his Die Enlstehung der , aJtkatholischen Kirche (Bonn, 1857). 1 8 The Evolution of Early Christianity Ritschl sought to correct the strong individuaUsm of Schleiermacher by emphasizing the significance of the community, the church, which constitutes the visible kingdom of God, but he foUowed Schleiermacher rather than Baur in defining the distinctive features character izing the historical life of the community. For him the significant thing in its history was not a conflict of ideas issuing in doctrinal postulates, but a type of experience which remained essentially uniform in content from the time of Jesus and the apostles on. In this fundamental respect there was unity between Paul and the primitive Palestinian believers, and this same original feature was also held to be preserved in the early CathoUc church, though it was gradually obscured by degenerating influences from the contemporary heathen world, particularly in the realm of philosophical speculation. Thus for Ritschl, as for Schleiermacher, Christianity was in no fundamental sense developmental; there was no vital interaction between essential Christianity and contemporary life during the course of history. Between Ritschl and the modern "liberals," as repre sented for example by Harnack.' there is no radical difference of view regarding Christianity's nature. Harnack insists that the historian nowadays must show how one thing has grown out of another, he recognizes that reUgion too is no ready-made structure but a genuine growth, and he finds Christianity not only to have been subject to change in the past, but to be in a ' Cf. his Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte (Freiburg, 1886-90, 1894- 973), English tr., History of Dogma (London, 1896); Christianity and History (London, 1907); Das Wesen des Christentums (Leipzig, 1900), English tr., What Is Christianity? (New York, 1901). The Developmental Nature of Christianity 19 state of constant development. Yet "essential" Chris tianity is something quite distinct from the totality of these varying historical phenomena commonly summed up under the general designation "Christianity." A restricted section of the whole is chosen as kernel while the remainder is declared to be only husk, and the principle of selection is determined by defining this "essence" in terms of a particular type of individual experience, the consciousness of fellowship with God, the believer thus repeating Jesus' experience of God's fatherhood and man's sonship. This ethical-religious element formed the heart of Jesus' message and con stitutes the kernel of Christianity in every genuine stage of its career. Since this essence is ex hypothesi a distinctively Christian possession, the influence of contemporary life upon primitive Christianity becomes a question of only minor importance. While environment does, in a general way, affect personal experience, the source of a truly Christian experience is God as mediated by the historical Jesus whose personal influence is perpetuated by believers. As Harnack puts it, "at the end of the series of messengers and agents of God stands Jesus Christ. They point back to him, and it is from him that has sprung the river of Ufe which they bear in themselves as their own.'" The tributaries which empty into this river are either so smaU as to have no appreciable effect, or else their impure waters only discolor the original stream, and necessitate the work of filtration. Thus Christianity is essentially static and quantita tive rather than developmental, and the problem of its ' Christianity and History, p. 44. 20 The Evolution of Early Christianity relationship to contemporary life practically drops out of sight.' The so-caUed Modernist movement within Roman Catholicism also places much emphasis upon Christian experience, though not confining its scope so narrowly as many "liberal" Protestants do. The collective Christian consciousness and the doctrine of divine immanence are basal in the Modernist's definition of Christianity. It is primarily an affair of the human spirit in feUowship with the immanent God of Chris tian faith, and so is largely developmental in character. In contrast with the traditional Catholic view, primitive Christianity is not regarded as a perfect robe to be further unfolded but as a vital organism constantly expanding into new stages of life; and, as .opposed to the Protestant notion of deterioration, every stage in this development is held to be part of a legitimate and necessary growth.^ Christianity at first was a reUgion of spiritual simplicity, "formless and undogmatic," which spread over the Roman world, "adapting itself to the mentality and spiritual education of every region ' Similarly Mezger, Die Absolutheit des Christentums und die Religions- geschichte (Tubingen, 1912), makes the untranscendable nature of Christian experience as revealed in Jesus the guaranty of Christianity's absoluteness. Christian development pertains to the more perfect realization of fellowship with God, but this type of experience is not subject to change, and can never be transcended, nor does it owe its genesis to evolutionary forces. In other words, Christianity is ulti mately a canonical experience, and everything else that goes into the making of its history is of secondary moment if not, indeed, really spurious. » See Loisy, L'Emngile et I'igUse (Paris, 1903, 1908'!), English tr. The Gospel and the Church (London, 1903). The Developmental Nature of Christianity 21 and borrowing from each the elements most suited for its own further development.'" Yet by a kind of duaUsm Christianity from the start is found to contain a static element which remains un affected by development. To cite the Modernist Programme, "everything in the history of Christianity has changed — doctrine, hierarchy, worship; but all these changes have been providential means for the preservation of the gospel spirit which has remained unchanged through the ages."^ There is "a religious experience which once evoked by the preaching of Christ has remained substantially the same thing under all its successive embodiments."^ Since this immutable essence constitutes the fundamental and distinctive thing in primitive Christianity, the Modernist does not need to be concerned primarily with the question of environ mental influences. They have no vital bearing upon Christianity's ultimate genesis and essential character, but pertain only to its later expansion. This survey of opinion shows how generally Chris tianity has been defined in static and quantitative terms. At one time it is said to be identical with an ecclesiastical ' The Programme of Modernism (New York, 1908), pp. 79 f. ' P. 92. 3 P. 77. Cf. also Loisy, The Gospel and the Church, p. 171 : "Setting aside all theological subtleties, the Catholic church, as a society founded on the gospel, is identical with the first circle of the disciples of Jesus if she feels herself to be, and is, in the same relation with Jesus as the disciples were, if there is a general correspondence between her actual state and the primitive state, it the actual organism is only the primi tive organism developed and decided, and if the elements of the church today are the primitive elements grown and fortified, adapted to the ever-increasing functions they have to fulfil." 2 2 The Evolution of Early Christianity organization, which is attested by mechanical revelation or approved by practical tests of efficiency. Again, it is a fixed system of doctrine, whose finality is estabUshed by appeal either to a scriptural canon, or to a certain form of metaphysical speculation. Finally, it is a specific type of religious experience, either narrowly restricted in content, or else made broad enough to include different varieties. Even when the notion of development is introduced to account for changes in the course of history, a certain immutable and historically unconditioned "essence" appears at the outset, or emerges in the process of growth. This forms the primal element in Christianity's constitution, and is the ultimate ground of its distinctive character as a religion. The student of Christian origins is, therefore, mainly con cerned with this initial and fundamental essence. The question of contemporary influences is whoUy secondary, since it relates only to the later history of this given original and never to its primary constitution. AU phenomena fall into two categories, namely, original or borrowed, genuine or spurious, essential or unessen tial. It is becoming more and more difficult to maintain the legitimacy of these distinctions. Any effort to fix upon an irreducible minimum of genuine "essence" can suc ceed only by setting up some quantity of experience, or belief, or practice as essential, while aU other features are denominated unessential. But this is a doubtful procedure. In the first place, instead of defining Christianity comprehensively, attention is centered upon certain restricted phases of the whole. Even if it were possible to ascertain with perfect certainty a The Developmental Nature of Christianity 23 given sum of items possessed in common by aU Chris tians, it would StiU be quite unfair to neglect all other features which may have been equally important and essential at certain periods and within particular circles. To affirm, for example, that the essential elements of Christianity in the first century were only those items which beUevers of that day have in common with the "liberal" theologian of the twentieth century, is to eUminate as unessential to first-century believers their reaUstic eschatology, their belief in demons and angels, their vivid supernaturaUsm, their sacramentaUsm, their notion of the miraculous content of religious experience, and various other features of similar importance. Cer tainly primitive Christianity cannot be perfectly under stood without taking full account of these items, and one may fairly question the legitimacy of any interpre tation which does not make them even "essential" to Christianity's existence in the first century. Furthermore, the customary distinction between genuine and spurious is likely to prove misleading. It assumes that a sharp line can be drawn between what we know to have been original with a certain group of persons like, say, Jesus and the apostles, and constituent items from other sources. But this rigid distinction is not always possible, not even in the case of Jesus him self. He and his followers all lived in vital contact with specific environments and their religion was the outcome of personal reaction upon their several worlds of reality. Not only is it thus impracticable to distinguish between "genuine" and "spurious" in their religion, but the attempt to do so leads to a false inference. It is a mistake to assume that only those items were genuine 24 The Evolution of Early Christianity which chanced to be strictly novel, while those which can be proved to be old or secondary are therefore spurious. Everything was genuine in so far as it was the expression of genuine conviction and experience on their part, and answered a real religious need of their time. Similarly in later times reaction upon new data produces different phases of religion whose genuineness, however, cannot be impugned merely on the ground either of newness or of want of newness. All items which answer the actual demands of any age constitute genuine factors in its religious Ufe. Only when one assumes that a specific set of data from a particular group of individuals can be justly said to embrace every thing belonging to real reUgion, may all other items be called spurious. But this, both practically and theo retically, is a very precarious assumption. An even more serious difficulty connected with defin ing Christianity as a static essence is the fact that any such definition deals with certain products or objective characteristics of this religious movement rather than with its real life. It is true that Christian persons for nearly nineteen hundred years have been contributing toward a rich fund of historical data on the basis of which we may describe various phases of their religious activity. They have established organizations, formulated doc trines, and defined the content of their experience in order to conserve and legitimize for the benefit of others the results of their own religious Uving. Their work in these respects certainly has its value, yet no given quan tity of excerpts from these data can be said to constitute ' ' Christianity ' ' in the ultimate sense of that term. Such things will at best be only products— perhaps in some % The Developmental Nature of Christianity 25 instances merely by-products — of the great vital religious movement as a whole. In order to understand the real genesis and the pecuUar genius of the Christian move ment we must penetrate beneath these historical remains to the vital forces by which they were produced and sustained from age to age. In this fundamental and comprehensive sense Chris tianity is coterminous with the actual religious living of individuals and communities who from generation to generation have inherited the Christian name and made the religious attainments of former Christians a part of their own world of objective reality. Historical Christianity is a result of this religious living and must of necessity show a variety of features corresponding to different conditions of life at different times and in different localities. A quantitative definition of this religious movement must, if it is to be comprehensive or even representative of the whole, be true to the totality of past historical phenomena and must accurately antici pate all future variations. A statement which includes only a certain selected "essence," or which sets limits to the possibilities of future development, is in reality only a partial definition of certain phases which have appeared in the historical career of the movement. Christianity can be ultimately and comprehensively] conceived only in the developmental sense, as the product of actual persons working out their religious problems in immediate contact with their several worlds of reality, the process being renewed in the religious experience of each new generationA CHAPTER II THE IMPORTANCE OF ENVIRONMENT FOR CHRISTIAN ORIGINS A developmental conception of Christianity's nature carries with it important implications for a genetic study of the new religion's early history. If the move ment is understood to have been from the outset an affair of real life, the variant factors entering into the making of life in that day will naturally have much to do with fashioning the historical phenomenon which we commonly term primitive Christianity. In that case any effort to understand the real inner constitution of this new movement must be based upon a careful study of the vital forces dominating the first beUevers' imme diate environment. Must the student of Christian origins relate the new religion thus closely to its con temporary world ? The problem of origins is a comparatively sunple one when Christianity's nature is defined statically. Then a particular quantity of instruction, especially com municated to certain individuals and passed on by them to their successors, constitutes the substance of the new religion. It is a quantity of revelation uniquely and authoritatively mediated through specified agencies. One has only to define the proper channel of revelation in order to learn the secret of Christianity's being. If an ecclesiastical organization is vested with this divine authority, the pronouncements of the church regarding the origins of religion are final. If a canon of Scripture 26 Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 27 is made the norm for testing revelation, the New Testa ment version of the rise of Christianity can be accepted without reserve or supplement. It the writers of the New Testament books are thought to be interpreters who do not always report tradition completely and in falUbly, the divine deposit of truth may yet be found in the teaching of prominent persons like Paul or Jesus. Christianity is still essentially a gift from heaven, granted to certain select individuals. At stated times in the past God has determined to make himself known to specific persons who, in turn, have left to posterity definite instructions to be observed by all later genera tions who would be truly religious. Thus the initial force which brought the new religion into being and the power by which it is at present maintained act from without and guarantee its other-worldly character. This emphasis upon externalism is out of harmony with a thoroughly vital conception of religious develop ment. According to the latter notion, communion with God was not in the past arbitrarily conditioned by special displays of the divine initiative, nor is it to be obtained at present by any one set of specific prescriptions. It is available for every individual on a strictly empirical basis. Therefore spiritual attainments are conditioned by one's surroundings, they are colored by the character istics of one's personality, and they are measured by the vigor of one's reUgious activity. The content of experi ence will vary according to individual circumstances and will be variously expressed in the language of different persons. Since experience is not externally and mechani cally mediated, variation does not invalidate its con tent nor does uniformity guarantee its normativeness. 28 The Evolution of Early Christianity Consequently Christianity may quite properly embrace different types of reUgious attainment in accordance with variations in environment and personality. From this point of view the primary activity which called the Christian movement into existence was not the ab extra insertion of some other-worldly quantity of ritual, doctrine, or ethical instruction into the realm of y human experience, butjan outburst of spiritual energy on the part of Jesus and his followers striving after new and richer religious attainments under the stimuli of a new and more suggestive environment.! It was only natural, from the standpoint of ancient psychology and metaphysics, that those attainments should have been portrayed in the language of externalism; but from the modern standpoint they must be estimated in terms of various individuals' response to their religious environ ment, their direct reaction upon their own peculiar world, and their personal conquests in the realm of spiritual experience. The importance of becoming familiar with the early Christians' world as a means of understanding their life is coming to be more fully appreciated by students of Christian origins. In the first place, the language in which the New Testament books are written is now regarded as a distinct product of Graeco-Roman times. This language is Greek, but it is not the Greek of Plato or Xenophon either in its style or in its vocabulary. Centuries of life under new conditons had produced a language which was in some respects new. Old words underwent a change in meaning, new words were coined, syntactical usage changed, and new standards of Uterary style were established. This new world-speech the ; Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 29 koine (Koivri)—ia the product of post-classical times and can be properly understood only in the new setting. Formerly it used to be supposed that the New Testament contained a large number of hapax legomena, and that the New Testament writers had been forced to create this unique vocabulary in order to express their new reUgious ideas. Similarly other words apparently had in their New Testament setting a significance not exemplified elsewhere in Greek Uterature. But in the great majority of instances these unusual words have since been found in the everyday speech of that age. Thus we are brought to realize the necessity of reading the New Testament books primarily in the Ught of Unguistic usage in the first century of our era.' The poUtical and social background of early Chris tianity is also largely a Hellenistic product. Even within Palestine the conditions under which Jesus and his followers Uved were quite directly the result of contact with the outside world. It was this force which had caused the Maccabean rebellion, and the ' The literature on this subject is already voluminous. A few representative books are Thumb, Die griechische Sprache im Zeiialter des Hellenismus (Strassburg, 1901); Deissmann, Bibelstudien (Marburg, 189s) and Neue Bibelstudien {ibid., 1897), English tr., Bible Studies (Edinburgh, 1901), also Licht wm Osten (Tubingen, 1908, 1909^), English tr., Light from the Ancient East (New York and London, 1910); J. H. Moulton, A Grammar of New Testament Greek (Edinburgh, 1905, 1906''); Radennacher, Neutestamentliche Grammatik (Tubingen, 1911). For periodical literature, being mostly a survey of recent books, see Wit- kowski, "Bericht uber die Literatur zum Koine aus den Jahren 1903-6," Jahresbericht fUr Altertumswissenschaft, CLIX (1912), 1-279; Deiss mann, "Die Sprache der griechischen Bibel," Theologische Rundschau, XV (1912), 339-64; Stocks, "Das neutestamentliche Griechisch im Lichte der modemen Sprachforschung," Neue kirchliche Zeitschrift, XXIV (1913), 633-53 and 681-700. 30 The Evolution of Early Christianity subsequent poUtical and social problems of Jewish Ufe were solved under the influence of constant pressure from without. The existence of such parties as Sad ducees, Pharisees, and Zealots, the presence of the tax- collectors and the exaction of the tribute money, the policing of Jerusalem with foreign soldiers and the Roman control of the high-priesthood, the estabUsh ment of synagogues where the service was conducted in the Greek language — these are a few indications of the extent to which foreign forces had affected conditions of life even in Judaea; while for the Jews of the Dispersion this sort of influence was necessarily much greater. The early Christians soon found themselves in even closer touch than the Jews had been with gentile Ufe. When they broke with the synagogue, as they were soon forced to do, and when the membership of the community became largely gentile, the background of their life and thinking became increasingly non-Jewish. Their cul tural status in general was that of the society in which they had been reared, the activities of their everyday life were determined by contemporary economic con ditions, in fact their whole world of reaUty with aU its complicated relationships was the Graeco-Roman world of the first century a.d. In so far as these relationships affect the religion of individuals — and such influence is always more or less pronounced — it is important that the contemporary political, social, and cultural situation should be taken into account in studying the beginnings of Christianity. Still more important for our present study is the reUgious setting which the Graeco-Roman world fur nished for the Ufe of the early Christians. It is easy. Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 31 however, to overlook the importance of this background. Until within comparatively recent times the nature of Christianity has been so defined as practically to exclude the notion of important contemporary religious relation ships for the early Christians, and the subject has accord ingly been very generally neglected. We do not always realize that Christianity arose in a "very religious" world. Its ultimate triumph leaves moderns with the impression that it has always been the same dominant and self-sufficient religion which it seems to be in our day. Even when the existence of its original competitors is recognized, their popularity and strength may be greatly discounted. The religions of the Roman Empire in the first century a.d. were not so completely decadent as has often been imagined. This was in reaUty a period of remarkable religious activ ity in which various types of faith spread themselves over the Mediterranean world. The strength and extent of Judaism at that time, both in Palestine and in the Diaspora, are a well-known fact. The Gentiles also were hardly less religious in their own way than were the Jews. Paganism offered men the help of many different deities with a variety of doctrines and ceremonies designed to meet the needs of different classes of wor shipers. ReUgion was a subject of general interest. It occupied a large place in the Ufe of the common man, it was discussed by poets and phUosophers, and even the state claimed to be estabUshed upon a religious basis. Christians, instead of being among the first advocates of reUgion to enter this territory, were really among the last. Consequently they were brought into immediate contact with other faiths, a contact so close and so long 32 The Evolution of Early Christianity continued that it at once suggests the probability of important genetic relationships between the new reU gion and its contemporaries. However extensively the former may seem to abound in original features, one must recognize that in childhood it was rocked in a Jewish cradle and that it grew to maturity in a gentile home. Its Jewish connections are admittedly extensive, but at an early date the new movement was transferred to gentile lands. Long before the first century closed the chief centers of Christian activity had moved from Palestine to Syrian Antioch, Ephesus, Corinth, Rome, and possibly to Alexandria. All these places were strongholds of other religions, with which Christians were thus living in close contact during the impression able period of youthful Ufe in the new faith. Nor did the contemporary religions fade away quietly before the new propaganda. On the contrary, they offered a stout resistance. Although Christians vigor ously proclaimed the utter worthlessness of any reUgion except their own, their hearers were by no means ready to accept this interpretation of the situation. It would be a grave mistake to suppose that the adherents of all other faiths were generally dissatisfied with their past religious history. Just as Yahweh retained the aUe giance of his chosen people, so the pagan deities had not only loyal foUowers but in some instances also energetic missionaries. We must not think that the Christian evangeUsts cultivated purely virgin soil, for in reaUty they worked fields already occupied by formi dable competitors. Opposition came first from the Jews and then from the GentUes, and continued in force for several generations. Certainly at no time within the Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 33 first century could it be said that the new religion had so completely displaced other faiths, or had so thoroughly isolated itself, as to make their influence an item of no possible consequence for its own life. Since Christian missionaries were thus forced to com pete for a place in occupied territory, they were not at liberty to create aU religious data de novo. Their audi ences were composed of people who had already worked out an extensive religious vocabulary, who gave much attention to the observance of stated rites, and who thought in terms of certain generally accepted ideas. While the Christian preachers could not have won con verts without proclaiming the newness and superiority of Christianity, stiU their prospects for success would seemingly have been slight had they not used the terminology which was familiar to their hearers and shown that the new religion, however novel and self- sufficient it might claim to be, conserved and enhanced the values of the old. The latter could not be totally ignored in actual practice if Christianity was to meet, as its advocates manifestly intended it should, the same practical religious demands which its predecessors had — inadequately, according to the Christian view — aimed to satisfy. Under these circumstances it was necessary for the Christian preacher to state his message in the religious language and thought-forms of the age. While he doubtless had no intention of deliberately borrowing from foreign sources, he certainly did not have ready at hand in Christian tradition the full solution of these practical problems. It was his task to make adjust ments to new situations. This pragmatic necessity may easily, though quite unconsciously, have resulted 34 The Evolution of Early Christianity for Christians in the enrichment of experience and the evolution of ideas and practices under the influence of contemporary reUgions. This possibiUty is further supported by the fact that Christianity did not start out fuU grown, but developed some of its important characteristics in response to the exigencies of expansion. At first the Christian com munity seemed to think of itself chiefly as a messianic company of orthodox Jews, but Jewish rejection of its messianic teaching forced the development of an inde pendent organization. The practical demands of gentile missions also compelled a change of attitude toward the Jewish ceremonial law, a change to which some Pales tinians strenuously objected. But the gentile forces prevailed. And ultimately the reaUstic Jewish escha tology, so dominant in the early days, had to be recast and the reUgious values which it embodied restated, to correspond with the actual course of history and the more stable circumstances in which gentile Christians found themselves. Furthermore, the membership of the churches in these formative days must have consisted mainly of converts from other faiths. Christianity was not yet old enough to have trained up men from youth within its own communion. At first very little attention seems to have been given to the children, doubtless because it seemed improbable that they would have time to grow to man hood before the end of the world should come. The importance of bringing them up within the church was later reaUzed, but the procedure apparently was con trary to apostoUc practice, since tradition sought to jus tify the innovation by recaUing that Jesus had overridden Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 35 the apostles' views when he said, "Suffer the Uttle chil dren to come unto me; forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of God.'" Yet in all probabUity during the first century many members of Christian communities — until the last quarter of the century certainly a large majority — had previously been adherents of other religions, and it is quite unlikely that their past would be completely obliterated in making the transition from one communion to another. The effect of past training was evident in the case of Palestinians like James and his conservative associates in Jerusalem, as well as in the case of Hellenists like Stephen, Paul, and Apollos. That the situation would be similar among gentile converts is intrinsically most probable. When they espoused the new movement they must of necessity have brought with them a certain intellectual, moral, and religious heritage which would thus become a vital part of developing Christianity. These conditions must have been very significant for the origins of the new religion. (Since its advocates Uved in a world already full of competing religions, since they were in close contact with other faiths and even contended with them for territory already occupied, since many aspects of developing Christianity were determined under the pressure of these conditions, and since the membership o*f the Christian communities was drawn largely from other communions, the importance of consulting the reUgious situation in the contemporary Graeco-Roman world is self-evidentj. Does it foUow that Christianity was not in truth a new religion but only a recasting of religious data already ' Mark 10: 14; Matt. 19: 14; Luke 18: 16. 36 The Evolution of Early Christianity present in the ancient world ? This has sometimes been affirmed. Yet no serious historian cares to deny that a new reUgious awakening began with the preaching of John the Baptist, that its scope was enlarged and its force accelerated through the work of Jesus, and that in the century following his death the new movement grew rapidly in numbers until its sway extended far beyond its original Palestinian home. That the move ment was new in the formal sense of being another religion among others already in existence is a generally recognized fact. Not only was it one among others, but in a relatively short time it almost completely supplanted all competitors. Though the popular faiths and the philosophies of the day endured for a few generations, they ultimately disappeared. Judaism indeed main tained an independent existence, but only under the shadow of intense opposition and in remote places. Within a few centuries Christianity became not merely the most prominent but virtuaUy the only recognized reUgion of the Mediterranean world. This success is sometimes thought to prove its absolute independence of all environmental relationships; had it not been a strictly new creation it could not have routed all oppo nents so thoroughly, nor could it have answered so ade quately the various reUgious demands of that day. This, however, is not the only possible interpreta tion of the data. May not Christianity's phenomenal success have to be ascribed in large measure to the skill with which zealous missionaries like Paul — who strove to become "all things to all men" that he might save some — adapted themselves to contemporary con ditions ? In no other way is it possible, we are sometimes Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 37 told, to explain how a movement begun by a smaU Jewish sect could expand so widely and rapidly, could add so many new features in the process of expansion, and could meet the needs of so many different types of people. Its champions, particularly on gentile soil, are credited with having possessed a real genius for adopting and readjusting current religious values, thus fortifying their cause with the more vital and permanent elements of contemporary faiths. So Christianity has been explained as a collection of ancient myths, an appropriation of current rites, and a combination of already existing religious ideas, without any essentially new features. In its most extreme form this type of interpretation can even dispense with the historical Jesus, since his personal activity is no longer necessary to account for the origin of Christianity. This disposition to ignore the significance of historical personalities, and to attach undue importance to ideas and rites, may easily be overstressed in recognizing the importance of environment for the genesis of a reUgious movement. Jesus' personal activity, as well as that of his disciples, forms an indispensable factor in the origin of Christianity.' Yet can their work be called "new" if they did not obtain the main content of their religion by means of formal revelation and if at the same time their thought and activity were molded and influenced by surroundings ? On a static definition of Christianity's nature this question would be answered negatively, for then newness must be measured by the quantity of absolutely new dogmas, ethical ideals, or ecclesiastical rites produced. But a vitally developmental conception ¦ See Case, The Historicity of Jesus (Chicago, 1912). 38 The Evolution of Early Christianity of Christianity's character finds the new religion's [distinctiveness in its devotees' fresh attainment of religious experience through personal religious UvingTj Not only the content of the experience, and the doctrines or rites based upon it, but also the use which Christians make of their spiritual energy in their efforts to answer the religious demands of their age constitute, in the last analysis, the uniqueness of Christianity. While a forceful personaUty like Jesus or Paul wiU naturally be in many respects distinctive in the realm of religion, we must guard against assuming that original features are necessarily, merely in virtue of their new ness, more valuable than appropriated items. When religious values are tested by the criterion of vital efficiency, the question of novelty and unique origin is not primarily important. K it were possible to duplicate many experiences of the Christians in the lives of their predecessors or contemporaries, and if the majority of the ideas they advocated and the rites they observed should be found to have been already current in earlier times, the Christian movement would stiU retain its significance because of the way in which its exponents co-ordinated their religious activity with the life of their day. While their experience may not always have been absolutely "new," it was a fresh and vital spiritual attainment on their part. Such attainment was, to be sure, conditioned by past religious training and contemporary ideas, but it also represented the results of a new reaction upon given objective data. Similarly the ideas and rites employed to objectivize, evaluate, and convey to others the content of experiential religion may for the most part have existed already in the Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 39 contemporary world, but these things took on a new significance in the Christians' own thinking when made to function anew in their solution of vital reUgious prob lems. In this sense "old" and "new" may be equally valuable and equally germane to early Christianity. ^he fundamental worth of Christianity lay in the manner in which its advocates ministered to the vital religious needs of the time, not in the assumption that the methods and tools employed had never been used before^ On first thought, we may be disposed to infer that they must have used new tools else they could not have accom plished their great task, but is this a necessary assump tion? Historical investigation may show that they generally employed tried instruments and customary methods, adopting new ones only when the old failed to serve their purpose. Even then they need not have assumed the role of inventor; they may quite as likely have made a new selection from existing materials. In any case, the uniqueness of the Christians' work lay fundamentally in their vital experience and vigorous activity rather than in any creation of a new body of quantitative data. Hence the need to study their life in the Ught of en vironment. Here they found their religious problems; these problems were worked out through reaction upon this environment; it supplied the materials for use in the construction of their religious thinking, and it fur nished stimuU for their richest spiritual developments. This does not mean that there was no originality in Christianity, for it does not ignore the creative activity of those forceful personalities who were responsible for starting the new movement on its way and who added 40 The Evolution of Early Christianity from time to time momentum to its Ufe. They indeed felt themselves divinely guided in the work of giving the world a new religion, but their conviction had been attained, and continued to receive new impulse and power, through a strong spiritual reaction upon their immediate world of reaUty. Their faith was born and "grew to maturity amid conflicts fought out in the arena of real Ufe. As this scene of action was at first distinctly Jewish, but soon became mainly gentile, the early Christians' relation both to their Jewish and to their gentile environment is one of the primary facts to be reckoned with in a study of Christian origins. This problem, particularly on the side of gentile con nections, has as yet received a relatively smaU amount of serious consideration. In describing the rise of Chris tianity much stress has been placed upon the personal contributions of Jesus and the apostles. Their peculiar significance for the founding of the new reUgion may to some extent justify this procedure, yet even here the environmental problem at last forces itself to the front. While literary criticism of the Gospels has greatly clari fied Jesus' historical figure, the exact determination of even the earliest source documents yields only certain more or less primitive versions of Jesus' words and deeds. Neither these documents, nor the Jesus whom they portray, produced Christianity in the first instance; Christians — or different circles of Christians — produced the documents, describing Jesus as seen from their point of view and interpreted in terms of their special problems. The incentives prompting communities or individuals to produce documents, and the influences which guided them in the selection and revision of Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 41 materials, are the ultimate factors in the situation a knowledge of which conditions aU genuinely historical study. Hence the historicity of all tradition must be judged ultimately in the light of believers' immediate surroundings.' Moreover, if complete information regarding Jesus' life and teaching could be obtained this would not fully disclose the origins of Christianity, if the latter is a vital growth rather than a static quantity. ^As a his torical movement, it arose out of what early believers made of Jesus and his teaching, not through the mere preservation of a deposit which he committed to them for safe-keepingT/ Their heritage from him may have been one of the most significant objective factors upon which they reacted — though historical study cannot take this statement to be simply axiomatic— yet it is to their own vital activity that we must look for the real secret of Christianity's life. Their activity was prompted, not by one agent, but by a host of stimuli which intermingled to produce the various phenomena of Christianity. In short, its origins must ultimately be read in the Ught of the many determining factors supplied by the entire contemporary life. The history of early Christianity has often been written — ^and well written — from the standpoint of the ' Regard for environment is also fundamental for interpretation of the Gospels as a whole, as well as for other New Testament writings. It is a mistake to imagine that the Gospels have served their entire pur pose for the historical student when he has sifted from them a set of excerpts which are thought to represent Jesus accurately. On the contrary, they are throughout excellent testimonials to the growing life of the new religion, and, in turn, can be interpreted accurately only from the standpoint of their own historical origin. 42 The Evolution of Early Christianity inner history of the community,' without special refer ence to the influence of other surroundings upon the lives of beUevers. The inner life of the new society is unques tionably a very important phase in the history of the new reUgion. The energy which this sense of community life developed, the growing consciousness of a distinc tive mission, the formulation of a common doctrine, the establishment of ecclesiastical organization and ritualis tic observances, and the production of a body of religious literature are all valuable items in the story of Chris tianity's origin. But if the lives of Christians were temporally conditioned and if their contact with environ ment was really a vital one, as we have come to beUeve, the story of their career is not complete until the various genetic forces which acted upon their Uves have been taken into account. In this way only shall we truly understand the real inner life of the community itself. In the genesis of early Christianity the contribution received from Jesus, and the forces which were generated within the inner circle of the first beUevers, formed sig nificant items, but all these things were blended into one effective whole under the pressure of forces suppUed by the immediate world in which Christians lived. , Consequently the primary problem in a study of Christian origins is not to ask how many static items other religions may have contributed toward the com position of a quantity of doctrine, conduct, or ritual ' E.g., Weizsacker, Das apostolische Zeitalter der christlichen Kirche (Tubingen, 1886, 19013), English tr., The Apostolic Age of the Christian Church (New York, 1892, 1899'); McGiflfert, A History of Christianity in the ApostoUc Age (New York, 1897, 1899=); Ropes, The Apostolic Age in the Light of Modern Criticism (New York, 1906); Achelis, Bas Christentum in den ersten drei Jahrhunderten (Leipzig, 1912); el al. I mponance of Environment for Christian Origins 43 said to constitute the "essence" of Christianity. This latter statement of the problem not only rests upon a misconception of Christianity's real nature, but does equal injustice to other faiths which were also ultimately vital and developmental rather than static and quanti tative existences. The genetic relation between religious movements with constantly changing vital connections cannot be adequately estimated simply on the basis of a series of similarities or differences in dogma and ritual. It is not at all inconceivable that similar items may have been produced independently, or may have had but a very remote common, ancestry; while differences which may seem on the surface radical may be only regional or temperamental variations of items which are genetically closely akin. It is exceedingly difficult if not impossible to determine genetic kinships by any atomistic pro- ' cedure, which touches only the surface of the problem. The deeper currents of actual life must be fathomed before one can trace the truly genetic relationships of reUgious movements in any age. The atomistic method, which has been used by some students in defense of the complete originaUty of Chris tianity and by others to prove its totally secondary character, is open to other serious objections. It too easily permits the h3^ostatizing of ideas or rites, thus treating them as though they have a real existence apart from the life of the people by whom they are cherished. We must not forget that ideas function only when entertained by persons and reinforced by environmental stimuU; they have no power apart from these social relationships. When isolated and pushed into the center of the stage, the discussion which revolves 44 The Evolution of Early Christianity about them too readily becomes a mere academic debate. "Ideas" cannot really be compared in any truly genetic sense until they have been connected in a vital way with the actual soil and the particular atmos phere which nourished their life. In line with the tendency to hypostatize ideas, it has also become customary to make a sharp distinction between the term used to describe the idea and the con tent of the idea. Thus items in Christianity designated by the same terms as similar items in other faiths are yet found to be sufficiently unique to allow the supposi tion that only the form is borrowed while the idea is wholly original.' Whether this separation of form from content is to be made as sharply in real Ufe as in our academic discussions may be fairly doubted. Certainly ideas have an exceedingly tenuous existence apart from the phrases embodying them, though it is inevitable that different people should stamp their individuaUty upon the ideas they entertain and the words they employ. But it is quite another thing to assume that the early Christians, when using terms already current among their reUgious contemporaries, first emptied the language of its common meaning and then filled it with a new content. Even had they done this, how would the people to whom they were speaking know what had hap pened ? Conceding that the Christians knew the mean ing generally attaching to current reUgious terminology, ' This argument is frequently advanced in such treatises as Clemen, Religions geschichtliche Erklarung des Neuen Testaments (Giessen, 1908), English tr., Primitive Christianity and Its Non- Jewish Sources (Edin burgh, 1912), also Der Einfluss der Mysterienreligionen auf das alteste Christentum (Giessen, 1913); BonhoflEer, Epiktet und das Neue Testament (Giessen, 1911); Kennedy, St. Paul and ihe Mystery-Religions (London, 1913). Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 45 and finding that it was used by them without definition of a change in meaning, normal procedure must assume that they — apart from individualistic variations — moved in the same thought- wor Id as their contemporaries. Yet another danger attending the method of itemized comparisons lies in the tendency to isolate ideas or persons from the totaUty of their historical environment. For example, instead of setting a New Testament writer into vital relation with his entire surroundings as a means of understanding his thought, an effort is made to expound his thinking as an independent entity. We are sometimes told that the interpreter's first duty is to define the exact meaning of a New Testament author before placing him into relation with his contemporaries. The non-Christian religions are, naturally, treated in a similar manner. When the content of two contemporary religions has been thus independently defined, each having been studied in vacuo, we might almost say, then the two entities are compared, with a view to observing genetic relationships. The fundamental fallacy of this procedure lies in supposing that any historic faith, or any particular exponent of that faith, can be fully under stood without reference to the great vital milieu which environment suppUes. An interpretation of reUgion, whether Christian or non-Christian, which does not pro ceed from a close examination of, and a sympathetic touch with, the total surroundings in which its adher ents lived cannot be truly historical in the fullest sense of that term. Finally, the real question at issue in a study of Chris tian origins is not whether certain items in the new religion can be classified as "original" while others may 46 The Evolution of Early Christianity be only "derived." If Christianity were fundamentally a static quantity of data it might be desirable at the out set to maintain the originality of these items in order to defend the new reUgion's right to exist. But the situation is very different when its real nature is defined in terms of the activities of actual persons whose spiritual experience was vitally linked with a definite social and religious environment. In their case everything may be called "original," in so far as it was a product of their own personal reUgious reaction upon their several worlds of reality; and everything may be said to be "derived," in the sense of being the immediate product of this reaction upon data suppUed by history or by immediate environment, and interpreted under the impulsion of stimuU furnished by the actual world in which beUevers lived. Even mystical items of spiritual attainment cannot be exempted from these reaUstic connections. The early Christians actually found God in contemporary Ufe, as well as in history and personal experience. Their age equipped them with a psychology and a metaphysics which frequently measured the highest religious values in terms of ecstasy, miracle, revelation, and externaUsm in general. These things in turn became a means of arriving at the heights of spiritual experience. While we may without hesitation affirm that such experience was often truly original, a new creation in the Uves of believers, it cannot be hypostatized and treated as though it were an isolated entity having some existence apart from the actual conditions in which it was shaped and by which it was sustained. The founders of Chris tianity, Uke Christians in subsequent times, found God Importance of Environment for Christian Origins 47 through contact with their own world, employing the agencies and responding to the stimuli furnished by their immediate surroundings. In other words, Christianity was not at the outset, nor did it ever become, primarily an abstract quantity of doctrine, ethics, or ritual. Christians produced dogma, defined rules of conduct, and estabUshed ritualistic observances, but these were secondary to the vital activity of actual Christian persons. A new generation might be greatly influenced by the static items which it received from its ancestors, yet it chose, interpreted, and supplemented these according to its own needs and in response to the vital demands which its own experience furnished. Its objective historical inheritance formed only a part of its total world of reality, and so constituted only one phase in its reUgious life. Thus the advocates of the new religion had from the start vital social rela tionships, and many important factors entering into the making of their faith from age to age must have been supplied by their contemporary world, a knowledge of which is therefore essential to any thorough under standing of Christian origins. The following survey of the evolution of primitive Christianity is made with special reference to the religious setting of believers. We shall not be chiefly concerned to discover just what items in the New Testament may be called "original" and what may be called "derived." Our task is broader and more fundamental. It is to study the early Christians' career in the light of their own vital reaction upon their immediate environment as they worked out their reUgious problems in New Testament times. CHAPTER III THE MEDITERRANEAN WORLD IN NEW TESTAMENT TIMES The territory about the eastern Mediterranean had been occupied successively by a variety of civilizations before the Christian era. The fertile Nile valley, the regions watered by the Tigris and the Euphrates, the Iranian plateau, the highlands of Asia Minor, the coast lands of Phoenicia, the shores of the Aegean, and distant Italy, all made from time to time their respective con tributions to the life of antiquity. Each of these civiliza tions shows distinctive characteristics corresponding to different cUmatic conditions and physical environ ments. Varying physical features, constituting natural barriers to unification, resulted in emphasizing tribal distinctions and in arousing national hostilities. Instead of developing a common world-culture on the basis of friendly intercourse between different peoples, one nation or another sought in turn to crush all rivals and to impose its own civilization upon the foreigner. Not until the political control came to be exercised by some one authority sufficiently strong to dominate the entire terri tory and sufficiently tolerant of different nationalities to allow all peoples a fair measure of equal rights, could anything like a common world-culture be estabUshed. This goal had been at least partially attained in New Testament times. Under Alexander the Great all the country from Greece on the west to the Indus on the east, from the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea on the 48 The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 49 north to the Indian Ocean, the Persian Gulf, and Egypt on the south had been made one kingdom. Alexander had not aimed simply at conquest; he sought to estab Ush both poUtical and national unification by a process of fusion. The success of his work is demonstrated by the degree of uniformity and the extent of common inter course which continued to show itself in this territory in spite of the poUtical disruption following Alexander's death. Later, Rome continued the process of unification in the western part of Alexander's empire. The Roman dominions at the end of Trajan's reign (117 a.d.) included all of Europe northward as far as Britain, the Rhine, and the Danube; in the East, Asia Minor, Armenia, Meso potamia, Assyria, Babylonia, Syria, Palestine, and Arabia Petraea; in the South, Egypt and the entire North African coast lands. Though Roman authority was never firmly estabUshed east of the Euphrates, still communication with the Farther East was main tained for commercial purposes. In the first century of our era there was comparatively free intercourse between all parts of that ancient world resulting in a fusion of its various elements such as had not been possible in any previous period of history.' ' The ancients themselves had become much interested in the study of geography, as a work like Strabo's shows (English tr. by Hamilton and Falconer, 3 vols., London, 1913). For modern treatises see Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (London, 1854); Bunbury, A History of Ancient Geography among the Greeks and Romans (2 vols., London, 1879) ; Ramsay, Historical Geography of Asia Minor (London, 1890), and article "Roads and Travel (in the New Testament)" in Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible (extra vol., New York, 1904); G. A. Smith, Historical Geography ofthe Holy Land (14th ed., New York, 1908) ; Hogarth, The Nearer East (New York, 1902); Forbiger, Handbuch der alten Geographie (3 vols., Leipzig, 1844-48; 2. Aufl., Hamburg, 1877); 50 The Evolution of Early Christianity To what part of this territory did the early Christians belong ? Tradition places their first assembly in Jerusa lem, although Jesus' own activity, according to Mark at least, had been chiefly in GaUlee. Even if the first important gathering of beUevers was in Jerusalem where the mother-church remained until shortly before the faU of the city in 70 a.d.. Christians in general by no means confined themselves to this narrow territory. No one set of geographical or cUmatic surroundings conditioned the entire Ufe of all Christians in New Testament times. There were, of course. Christians at Jerusalem who probably remained in that particular vicinity all their lives, but others who were greatly in the majority were scattered about the Mediterranean in different locaUties, many of them frequently changing residence as they moved with the shifting currents of Ufe. The New Testament data alone furnish ample evidence of this cosmopoUtan character of the new movement. Christians were already in the outlying districts of Palestine when Paul persecuted the new faith, and after his conversion he propagated the same teaching in Arabia, Syria, Cilicia, Asia Minor, Mace donia, and Greece. But Paul was only one — ^though the principal one about whom the writer of Acts cares to tell Theophilus — of many others who had adopted this new religion and continued to preach it in their travels. Kiepert, Lehrbuch der alten Geographie (Berlin, 1878), English tr., A Manual of Ancient Geography (London, 1881); Jung, Grundriss der Geo graphie von Italien und dem Orbis Romanus (Miinchen, 1887, 1897'); Gotz, Die Verkehrswege im Dienste des Welthandels (Stuttgart, 1888), pp. 312-514. Murray's Handy Classical Maps, edited by Grundy, are convenient for use. For the present study those of "The Eastem Empires," "The Roman Empire," and "Asia Minor" will be found most valuable. The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 51 Harnack' has made a Ust of places where Christians, or Christian communities, can be traced in New Testament times, and it is both astonishingly large and of wide geographical range. It includes the chief cities of Syria and Asia Minor as well as important centers in Mace donia, Achaia, and Italy. The failure of any New Testament writer to mention Africa is probably a mere accident, for the prominence of Christianity there in the second century suggests an early planting. While it may be very possible that Paul never carried out his intention of going to Spain,' it is not improbable that other Christians in their travels had already reached that point. Early Christianity as represented in the New Testament is no mere local product, but a wide spread reUgious movement embracing individuals from different places and from among different peoples. Since historical Christianity of New Testament times is a product of Christians' activity within the Graeco- Roman world as a whole, it becomes necessary to examine the chief characteristics of this civilization as a back ground for the study of Christian origins. But the specific situation in the first century a.d. cannot be understood in isolation from the history of the imme diately preceding period. In order to set the world of the New Testament age in its proper perspective some ac count must be taken of the main cultural forces brought into prominence by the work of Alexander the Great, carried forward under his successors (the "Diadochi"), ' Mission and Expansion of Christianity in the First Three Centuries (New York, 1908^), II, 91 flf.; translated from the German, Die Mission und Ausbreitung des Christentums in den ersten drei Jahrhunderten (Leipzig, 1906'). ' Rom. 15:24, 28. 52 The Evolution of Early Christianity and their descendants (the "Epigoni"), and perpetuated without any very extensive transformations in Roman times. Alexander's work marks the beginnings of a new epoch in ancient history. The type of culture which flourished in this period is commonly designated "Hellenistic," in contrast with the earUer "Hellenic" civilization of Greece proper. Formally speaking, we may say the Hellenistic age opened when Alexander of Macedonia set out upon his conquest of Asia in the spring of 334 B.C. His defeat of Darius at the battle of Issus in 333 B.C. and again at Arbela in 331 B.C. brought an end to Persian rule in western Asia.' Though the conqueror's own career was a short one— he died at Babylon in 323 B.C. — ^Macedonian rulers continued to govern the chief portions of Alexander's divided empire until Rome appeared upon the scene, finally taking over Macedonia in 148, Greece in 146, Syria in 64, and Egypt in 30 B.C. Thus Macedonian rule disappeared. From this time on the controlUng authority of the Mediterranean world was Roman. But in fixing dates we must not think that any section of humanity's life can be sharply isolated from its immediate context. The HeUenistic ' The year 338 B.C. is commonly made the beginning of the Hellenistic age, since this is the date of Philip's victory at Chaeronea after which the Diet of Corinth elected him a-Tparriybs airoKp&Tiiip of the Greek forces. After Philip's assassination in 336 Alexander was given the same appoint ment, but it required nearly two years to establish himself fifmly in this position, by quelling disturbances in various quarters, and administering to his opponents in Greece a crushing defeat at Thebes. Not until the spring of 334 had he reaUy completed the foundation upon which the new Hellenism was to be reared. To be sure, the initial stages of the move ment were much earlier, earlier even than the battle of Chaeronea. The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 53 age has many clearly distinguishable antecedents both in Greece and in the conquered lands, for the estabUshment of Roman dominion did not mean the obUteration of the previous civilization. In fact the distinctive char acteristics of Hellenistic culture remained very largely unchanged under the Roman emperors. Consequently the surroundings of Christians in New Testament times were virtually Hellenistic, even though in the more formal sense the world of that day was Roman. This Graeco-Roman age has often been termed a de cadent period in history, and therefore its importance has usually been greatly underestimated. When judged according to classical HeUenic standards the culture of Hellenistic times does at first sight seem quite inferior. This later age produced no poets to vie with Aeschylus, Sophocles, or Euripides; no philosophers who compete for first place with Socrates, Plato, or Aristotle; and no historian whom we read by the side of Herodotus, Thucydides, or Xenophon; yet, in contrast with Hellen ism proper, "Hellenicism," if we may use this rare though much-needed word, produced a distinctive cul ture whose significance for the history of human progress is none the less worthy of attention because it does not chance to be a mere replica of classical Hellenism. The poUtical events of this period form a long and com plicated story which can here be traced only in broadest outlines.' The brilUant miUtary career of Alexander has been recorded by several ancient historians. One of the ' Some attention is usually given to this period in the standard his tories of Greece, of which Holm, Geschichte des Griechenlands bis zum Ausgange des sechsten Jahrhunderts vor Christus (Berlin, 1836), English tr., A History of Greece (Vol. IV, New York, 1899), and Beloch, Griechi sche Geschichte, III, i (Strassburg, 1904), 260-556, and the same author's 54 The Evolution of Early Christianity most critical and accurate extant accounts is by Arrian, a Greek writer of the second century a.d. Of the source materials at his disposal the author employed chiefly a work by Ptolemy and another by Aristobulus. Both these persons had accompanied Alexander, the former being the founder of the Egyptian kingdom after Alexander's empire feU to pieces. As both works were compiled after their hero's death and by two persons of such prominence, Arrian beUeved their narratives to be generally trustworthy where their accounts agreed, "Griechische Geschichte seit Alexander" in Gercke and Norden, Ein leitung in die Altertumswissenschaft, III (Leipzig, 1913^), are among the best. Books dealing specifically with the Hellenistic age are: Droysen, Geschichte des Hellenismus (3 vols., Gotha, 1836-42, 1877-78'), the latest edition of which is a French translation, Histoire de I'hellenisme (Paris, 1883-85), made under the direction of Bouche-Ledercq; Mahaffy, The Story of Alexander's Empire (London, 1887), Greek Life and Thought from the Age of Alexander to the Roman Conquest (New York, 1887, 1896'), and The Progress of Hellenism under Alexander's Empire (Chicago, 1905); Niese, Geschichte der griechischen und makedonischen Staaten seit der Schlacht bei Chaeronea (3 vols., Gotha, 1893-1903); Kaerst, Geschichte des hellenistischen Zeitalters (2 vols., Leipzig, 1901-9). The situation in Roman times may be studied in Hertzberg, Geschichte Griechenlands unter der Herrschaft der Romer (3 vols., Halle, 1866-75); Marquardt, Romische Staatsverwaltung, being Vols. IV (Leipzig, 1881'), V {ibid., 1884'), and VI {ibid., 18853) of Handbuch der rbmischen Alterthilmer by Marquardt and Mommsen; Mommsen, Romische Geschichte (Vol. V, Berlin, 1 894''), English tr.. The Provinces ofthe Roman Empire from Caesar lo Diocletian (2 vols.. New York, 1887); Colin, Rome et la Grece de 200 A 146 avant Jesus-Christ (Paris, 1905); Mahafify, The Silver Age in the Greek World (Chicago, 1906) recast from the same author's Greek World under Roman Sway (New York, 1890); Hahn, Rom und Romanismus im griechisch-romischen Osten bis auf die Zeit Hadrians (Leipzig, 1906); Thieling, Der Hellenismus in Kleinafrika: Der griechische KultureinfMSS in den r'omischen Provinzen N ordwestafrikas (Leipzig, 1911). For accounts of this period among the ancient historians see Polybius, iv f., and xviii- xxxiii; Diodorus, xvii-xx; Livy, xxxi-xlv; and Appian, ix-xii. The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 55 but where they disagreed he selected what appeared to him the more creditable and more worthy of pres ervation. No modern work can supplant this con scientious account by a biographer who has sufficient admiration for his hero to write appreciatively and yet possesses a remarkably keen sense of loyalty to truth. The author's attitude throughout is well de scribed in his closing words: "In relating the history of Alexander's achievements there are some things which I have been compelled to censure but I am not ashamed to admire Alexander himself. Those actions I have branded as bad both out of regard for my own truthful ness and at the same time for the good of humanity. For this reason it was not without the agency of God that I myself undertook the task of writing this history." Here Arrian shows the effects of the strongly ethical and religious training he had received from Epictetus, a training which seems to have inculcated intellectual accuracy among its moral and religious precepts.' Alexander's career was as strikingly brilUant as it was brief. He moved his army, thirty to forty thousand strong, across the Hellespont in the spring of 334 b.c. First he visited the site of ancient Troy, performing religious ceremonies and going forward on his mission in the spirit of the ancient Homeric heroes. Though a Persian fleet held the Aegean, he seemed to have no fear • Plutarch's Alexander is also important. Though not so lengthy as Arrian's account it is more interesting as a character sketch. Plutarch's information was doubtless also derived mainly from the works of Ptolemy and Aristobulus, whose writings unfortunately are no longer extant. A great many ancient historians wrote about Alexander, e.g., Diodorus, xvii. For fragments from many sources see Muller, Scriptores rerum Alexandri Magni (Paris, 1877). 5 6 The Evolution of Early Christianity of being cut off from his base in Macedonia. In fact, it soon became evident that he intended to conquer so thoroughly the whole territory about the eastern Medi terranean that the fleet would be effectuaUy isolated from the Persian land forces and thus would be rendered comparatively harmless. Accordingly Alexander did not follow up his victories over Darius first on the banks of the Granicus in 334 and again at Issus in 333 . Instead of pursuing the Persians inland he proceeded to take possession of Syria and Eg3^t. He passed the winter of 332-31 in Egypt. While here he founded Alexandria, which was destined to become the chief commercial city of his empire as well as a most important center of culture in later times. At this time Alexander displayed again his usual attitude of deference toward the religion of the conquered peoples. The joy with which the Egyptians received him as their deliverer from the rule of the less sympathetic Persians is reflected in the tradition of his visit to the oracle of Ammon in the oasis of Siwah where the oracle is said to have informed him that he was a son of the god, though there is much variant ancient tradition on this subject.' Josephus^ reports a similarly favorable attitude of Alexander toward Jewish religion. While Josephus can hardly be called an unbiased authority on this subject, it would have been perfectly consistent with Alexander's attitude toward other foreign faiths for him to have treated Jerusalem with favor even to the extent of offering a sacrifice in the temple. ' Cf. Arrian, iii. 4; vii. 29; Plutarch, Alexander, 27; Diodorus, xvii. 51; Strabo, xvii. i. 43; Livy, ix. 18. ' Ant., XI, 8. The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 57 The conqueror was now ready for his eastern expedi tion. He set out in the spring of 331 and passing through Syria and Mesopotamia he arrived at the Tigris River which he crossed September 20. Here the Persian forces made their last stand, but the Macedonians won an easy victory. Alexander did not pursue Darius imme diately, but turned south to take possession of the rich Babylonian lands. Having gathered wealth here and at Susa, where the Persian kings had stored vast treasures, he ascended into the plateau of Iran. Here he captured the royal city of Persepolis and with it a great store of treasure. Pursuing the fleeing enemy he traversed Media, passed through the Caspian gates into the regions of Hyrcania, southeast of the Caspian Sea, and by forced marches with a few chosen followers finally overtook the fleeing Persians. He at last captured the dead body of Darius, slain by his companions and guarded only by his faithful dog.' The body was buried with kingly honors at Persepolis. The countries of Media and Parthia were placed under the rule of Alex ander's appointees and he pushed his way on toward India. He came into the valley of the Kabul in the winter of 330-329,^ and the next spring crossed the Hindu-Kush range, entering Bactria. The summer of the next year found him in India where he passed over the Indus and estabUshed his dominion in the Punjab. His army refused to accompany him farther east, so he turned southward, following the Indus to the sea. In the ' Aelian, De natura animalium, vi. 25. 'According to the common dating, but some scholars say 329-328, e.g., Hogarth, Philip and Alexander of Macedon, pp. 296 ff. 58 The Evolution of Early Christianity meantime a fleet was prepared which was sent to explore the sea route from India to Babylonia, while Alexander with the last of his forces set out in October to make the journey by land. After a weary march through the desert of Gadrosia the various parts of the army came together again in the Carmanian territory lying north of the mouth of the Persian Gulf. On reaching Susa in the spring of 324 Alexander took some time to adjust the affairs of government throughout his widely extended dominions. The next spring he moved to Babylon and made preparations for exploring the water route from Babylonia to Egypt. IncidentaUy he also planned to conquer Arabia, which was reported to be a land of wealth. All was in readiness for the expedition when Alexander fell sick and died in June, 323 B.C. With the death of Alexander the political unification which had been established began to crumble. It had been his custom to appoint governors like the Persian satraps over different provinces of the empire. This custom was continued, and an effort was made to main tain unity by setting up Alexander's infant son, and also his imbecile brother, Philip Arrhidaeus, as joint kings under the regency of Perdiccas, a distinguished general of Alexander's army. But this arrangement proved wholly inadequate for the complicated situation. The ease with which certain cities like Rhodes, and districts like Pontus, which had never been thoroughly conquered by the Macedonians, broke away from the central con trol, the existence of jealousies among the leading person ages in the government, and an ambition on Perdiccas' part to possess himself of the entire empire precipitated internal warfare which ultimately resulted in a threefold The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 59 division of the whole territory. In Macedonia the Antigonids ruled, claiming authority also over Greece and Thrace. The Seleucid rulers inherited the Asiatic dominions, and the Ptolemies established themselves in Egypt.The Antigonid kingdom arose only after a hard struggle. Antigonus Cyclops, one of Alexander's generals, had been made governor of Phrygia in 333, and on Alexander's death Lycia and Pamphylia were added to his territory. He assumed the title of king in 306, though he had not yet estabUshed himself in Macedonia. After his death in 301 his son Demetrius took up the fight and set himself upon the Macedonian throne in 294. From that time on the descendants of Antigonus' ruled, with a few interruptions, the ancient kingdom of Macedonia until it was dismembered by Rome in 168 and finally converted into a Roman province in 148 B.C. In general the Asiatic dominions of Alexander passed into the hands of Seleucus, a Macedonian who had dis tinguished himself in the Indian campaign. He was made chiliarch after Alexander's death, and two years later, satrap of Babylonia. The defeat of Antigonus Cyclops at Gaza in 312 was so important for the author ity of Seleucus that this has become the generaUy accepted date for the beginning of Seleucid rule. He did not at once gain control of western Asia, but he asserted his power effectively in the East. Not until the death " The Antigonid line, with approximate dates, consists of Antigonus Cyclops (323-301), Demetrius I (301-283), Antigonus Gonatas (283- 239), Demetrius II (239-229), Antigonus Doson (regent 229-221), Philip V (221-179), Perseus (179-168). Tarn, Antigonos Gonatas (Oxford, 1913), gives an account of the most important representative of this house. 6o The Evolution of Early Christianity of Antigonus in 301 did Syria come under Seleucus' authority. On gaining this territory he founded the city of Antioch on the Orontes, making it the capital of his empire. Later he subdued the greater part of Asia Minor and was about to estabUsh himself in Macedonia when he was assassinated. The history of the Seleucid rulers is a troubled one. They were at war now with one enemy and now with another. They were ahnost constantly competing with the Ptolemies for the control of Palestine and with the Antigonids, or with native rulers, for the control of Asia Minor. In the East they were perpetually troubled by uprisings of native princes whom they were frequently unable to dislodge from power. Furthermore, internal troubles so hastened the disintegration of their authority that Antiochus XIII was incapable of offering serious resistance to Pompey, and Syria was constituted a Roman province in 64 b.c' The situation in Egypt was, on the whole, a more stable one. Ptolemy, son of a Macedonian nobleman ' The Seleucid rulers may be listed as foUows : Seleucus Nicator (312-281), Antiochus I Soter (281-262), Antiochus II Theos (262-246), Seleucus II Callinicus (246-227), Seleucus III Soter (227-223), Antiochus III the Great (223-187), Seleucus IV Philopator (187-176), Antiochus IV Epiphanes (176-164), Antiochus V Eupator (164-162), Demetrius I Soter (162-150), Alexandar Balas (150-145), Demetrius II Nicator (145-140 and 129-126), Antiochus VI (145-143), Tr3TDhon (143-138), Antiochus VII Sidetes (138-129). After this the line of succession is hopelessly confused, rival claimants maintaining themselves con temporaneously. One line traced its descent from Antiochus VII and another from Demetrius II. Important books on this period are Frolich, Annales compendiarii regum et rerum Syriae (Wien, 1750); Gardner, Coins ofthe Seleucid Kings of Syria in the British Museum (London, 1878); Babelon, Rois de Syrie, d'Arminie et de Commagene (Paris, 1890); Bevan, The House of Seleucus (2 vols., London, 1902) ; Bouchg-Ledercq, Histoire des Seleucides (Paris, 1913). The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 6i named Lagus, became satrap of Egypt after Alex ander's death. His task in governing this territory was much less difficult than that of Antigonus or Seleucus, hence he was able to develop extensively the commercial possibilities of his dominions. This condition of affairs continued with his successors, whose wars were mainly for the purpose of control ling the commerce of the eastern Mediterranean. For this very reason it was inevitable that the Romans, who had crushed the Carthaginians in order to con trol the West, should also covet Egypt. But the Ptolemies in general were not aggressive rulers, they became willing alUes of Rome, and their power had been greatly weakened at an early date by domestic strife. Consequently, Rome removed its more danger ous enemies in Macedonia and Asia before deposing the Ptolemaic dynasty and converting Egypt into a province in 30 b.c' ' The rulers of the Ptolemaic dynasty are: Ptolemy I Soter I (323- 285), Ptolemy II Philadelphus (285-246), Ptolemy III Euergetes I (246-221), Ptolemy IV Philopator I (221-204), Ptolemy V Epiphanes (204-181), Ptolemy VI Philometor (181-145), Ptolemy VII Euergetes II (145-116), Ptolemy VIII Soter II (116-108 and 88-80), Ptolemy IX Alexander I (108-88), Berenice (80), Ptolemy X Alexander II (80), Ptolemy XI Philopater II Philadelphus Auletes (80-58 and 55-51), Cleopatra (51-30), Ptolemy XII Philopator III (51-47), Ptolemy XIII Philopator IV (47-44), Ptolemy XIV Caesar (51-30). Of the extensive literature on the Ptolemies, cf. Champollion-Figeac, Annales des Lagides (Paris, 1819); Letronne, Recueil des inscriptions grecques et latines de I'Egypte, etc. (Paris, 1842, 1848); Mahaffy, The Empire of the Ptolemies (London, 1895), and A History of Egypt under the Ptolemaic Dynasty (New York, 1899); M. L. Strack, Die Dynasiie der Ptolemder (Berlin, 1897); P. M. Meyer, Das Heerwesen der Ptolemaer und Romer in Aegypten (Leipzig, 1900); Bouche-Leclercq, Histoire des Lagides (4 vols., Paris, 1903-7); Steiner, Der Fiskus der Ptolemaer (Leipzig, 1913). 62 The Evolution of Early Christianity Under the early emperors' Roman rule was firmly estabUshed in the East as far as the Euphrates and the borders of Arabia. WhUe various native rulers were permitted to exercise a measure of autonomy, as for example the Herods in Palestine, Rome ruled with a strong hand and was much more successful than Alexan der's successors had been in preserving peace. Never before in the history of that ancient world had people known for so long a period the same measure of poUtical unity and stable government as that given to them by the Roman emperors in the first century of the Christian era. This process of unification, which had been going on intermittently since the time of Alexander the Great, resulted in a new and distinct t3^e of world-culture. The dominant item in it was, however, Greek, for Mace donia had become quite thoroughly Hellenized before becoming a world-power. PhiUp of Macedon had brought the Athenian phUosopher Aristotle to Pella to become the tutor of his son Alexander, and when the latter went upon his eastern expedition he took along scholars to gather information of aU sorts from the new country. Even before Alexander's day the Macedonians had come to admire Greek Uterature and art. The Macedonian kings who imported the culture of Greece into their court affirmed that they themselves were Greeks, for their ancestors, so they said, had originaUy migrated ' A list of the early emperors may prove useful for future reference: Augustus (27 B.C.-14 A.D.), Tiberius (14-37), Gaius Caligula (37-41), Claudius (41-54), Nero (54-68), Galba (68-69), Otho and Vitellius (69), Vespasian (69-79), Titus (79-81), Domitian (81-96), Nerva (96-98), Trajan (98-117), Hadrian (117-38), Antonius Pius (138-61), Marcus Aurelius (161-80, with whom Verus was associated from 161-69). The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 63 from Argos to Macedonia.' Nor is Alexander alone responsible for the dissemination of Greek culture in antiquity. Previous to his time Asia Minor, Italy, Phoenicia, Egypt, and even countries farther inland, such as Persia, had received cultural influences from Greece. But with Alexander the expansion became much more general and assumed many totaUy new forms. This new expansion of Hellenism meant a very sub stantial transformation of HeUenism itself. In the first place the ancient conception of the city-state as the poUtical unit gave place to the notion of world-empire under monarchical rule. The thought of kingship had early become repugnant to both Greeks and Romans. The former had never been able to present for any extended period a united front against Persia, for the very reason that there was no central authority within Greece itself. The Greeks needed a king. The con ception of a pan-Hellenic movement began to take shape in the days of Xenophon and Isocrates. The former in his treatise on the education of Cyrus tacitly praises the monarchical ideal, and Isocrates definitely advocates with all his trained eloquence that the Greeks unite under PhiUp of Macedon for the triumph of Greek power. But no one could have anticipated the success which was to attend Alexander. Although the free Greek city still retained a place within the empire of Alexander and his successors, it never could be restored to its full former glory. With the exception of a few of the stronger and wealthier cities, freedom meant only a measure of autonomy subject to the will of themonarch. ' Herodotus, v, 20 and 22; viii. 137; ix. 45. 64 The Evolution of Early Christianity The Romans were destined to undergo a simUar experience. A republican form of government was adequate so long as the city of Rome was practically the nation, and while constant warfare against common foes fostered loyalty to the state. But the conquest of the Roman legions added so many distant provinces to the kingdom that the republic inevitably gave way to the empire with one ruler who was virtually an abso lute monarch. Though he bore only the title of emperor, Augustus was as much a king as any of the oriental potentates had been. In the case of both Greeks and Romans the triumph of the monarchical idea was in reality a triumph of orientalism. The cultural consequences of this new unification are very significant. One of its most important effects is to be seen in the cosmopoUtan currents which the new order of things set in motion. Greek exclusiveness and disdain for foreigners were displaced by a degree of toleration and respect. Not only did artisans and merchants from the Orient invade every Greek city of importance, bringing with them their own culture, but Greeks themselves traveled into foreign lands where they learned that the foreigner could not be simply dismissed with the epithet "barbarian," and that the "world" {o'lKovnevrj) could no longer be thought to coin cide with the boundaries of ancient Hellas. Alexander had founded Greek cities at numerous points in his new empire, and since many of these places were important commercial centers Greek inhabitants became closely associated with peoples of other nationaUties. In fact, it was always Alexander's poUcy to bring about as thorough a fusion as possible between Greeks and natives. The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 65 This poUcy also had its marked effect upon the Orientals. Their culture was not ruthlessly suppressed by the conqueror but, on the contrary, it was given a new and less restricted field of activity. The stabiUty of Greek rule enabled the Asiatics to exhibit and pursue unmolested their industrial and commercial genius, while their adoption of the Greek language made them at home in all parts of the world where they were gener ally free, however, to maintain as much of their national individuality as they might choose. But this very freedom of intercourse, which resulted in a large infusion of Greek ideas and manners of Ufe, naturally tended to obliterate national distinctions and to issue in a strongly syncretistic form of culture. The Orient became Greek, though not in the classical sense; it was not Hellenic but Hellenistic. When Roman domination displaced Greek rule the situation did not greatly change. The cultural forces of the period continued to follow the lines laid down in the previous age. Rome did not crush the civilization of its conquered peoples any more than Alexander had done, and the stable government it established only permitted fusing tendencies to work all the more effect ively. Hellenistic manners gained so substantial a place among Romans themselves that their culture had become largely Hellenistic in the first century a.d. Even in the time of Horace it could be remarked that captive Greece took her fierce conqueror captive and introduced her arts into rustic Latium.' The component factors in this new Graeco-Roman culture are far too numerous to be listed in detail in this ' Epistles, ii. i. 156. 66 The Evolution of Early Christianity connection.' Our primary interest is in the religious status of society, but the latter cannot be correctly under stood except in relation to the total cultural situation. At that time society was greatly diversified in character, both because of the mixture of nationaUties and on account of wide differences between individuals' stations in life. There was a very distinct court life from the time of Alexander on, which was not always wholly bad in spite of its many reprehensible features. At an early date the Macedonian kings had brought Greek culture to their courts, to which Alexander later added many oriental adornments. His successors were some times men of letters, or at least they were interested in the literary and scientific pursuits of the day. In addi tion to the cities of Greece, where men of culture still ' Some useful works, in addition to those of a more general character cited above (p. 53, note i), dealing with this side of the Graeco-Roman world are Hausrath, Neutestamentliche Zeitgeschichte (4 vols., Munchen, 1868 fit.), English tr., A History of New Testament Times (4 vols., Lon don, 1895); Hatch, The Influence of Greek Ideas and Usages upon the Christian Church (London, 1890); L. Friedlander, Darstellungen aus der Sittengeschichte Roms in der Zeit wn Augustus bis zum Ausgang der Antonine (3 vols., Leipzig, 1888-96), English tr., Roman Life and Manners under the Early Empire (4 vols., New York, 1908-13); DUl, Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius (New York, 1904); Geffcken, Aus der Werdezeit des Christentums (Leipzig, 1904, 1909^); Wendland, Die hellenistisch-r'omische Kultur in ihren Beziehungen zu Judentum und Christentum (Tubingen, 1907, 1912^); Staerk, Neutestamentliche Zeit geschichte (Leipzig, 1907, 1912^); Deissmann, Licht vom Osten (Tubingen, 1909'), English tr.. Light from the Ancient East (New York, 1910); Wilamowitz-Moellendorff und Niese, Staat und Gesellschaft der Griechen und Romer (Leipzig, 1910); Fowler, Social Life at Rome in the Age oj Cicero (New York, 1909) ; Tucker, Life in the Roman World of Nero and Saint Paul (New York, 1910) ; A. Bauer, Fow Griechentum zum Christen tum (Leipzig, 1 910); T. C. Hall, Historical Setting of the Early Gospel (New York, 191 2); Baumgarten, Poland, und Wagner, Die hellenistisch- r'omische Kultur (Leipzig, 1913). The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 67 assembled, Antioch in Syria and Alexandria in Egypt — particularly the latter — formed seats of learning sup ported chiefly by royal patronage. But the work of the court philosopher or litterateur was not the only factor, nor even the chief factor, in stamping the influence of the ruler upon the Ufe of the people. The poorest subject in the empire felt directly or indi rectly the weight of supporting the monarchical insti tution, although he may never have witnessed a royal procession. While the payment of taxes was a burden, yet not all peoples in the empire resented this imposition so seriously as did the Jews. In fact, many persons so appreciated the stability of Roman rule and others were so hypnotized by its splendor that not a few were ready to hail the emperor as a savior and god. Even those who clung to the ancient forms of worship naturally found themselves phrasing their religious thinking in terms of imperialism. Thus the court, which embodied the monarchical principle so overwhelmingly in these days, exerted a most powerful and permeating influence in the Graeco-Roman world in New Testament times. In addition to the court, with its favorites and officials scattered over the empire, there was a large class of fairly prosperous citizens who had made their own way in the world. The HeUenistic age with its enlarged arena for action gave great opportunity for the develop ment of individuaUsm. In the smaU city-state the citizen Uved for the state, but a world-empire was too large and depended too Uttle upon individual support to caU forth the personal loyalty and service which had been so manifest in former times. The whole worid was now the sphere of action for the individual, his 68 The Evolution of Early Christianity primary motive for activity being his own personal welfare. Not a few citizens of the empire profited by the opportunity thus opened to them. While this was distinctly a commercial age, stUl it was an age of inteUectualism. Naturally it was less ideaUstic than classical Hellenic culture had been, for realism is a normal accompaniment of individualism. Plato philoso phized for philosophy's sake, but the Stoics, who were in the ascendency in Hellenistic times, philosophized for man's sake. The various sciences — geography, astron omy, mathematics, mechanics, medicine — were divorced from philosophy where they had originaUy belonged and were given an emphatically empirical bent. Not even oratory, Uterature, and reUgion escaped. Rhetoric was cultivated primarily as a means by which the individual earned a UveUhood; the poets wrote not to exalt, an abstract ideal but to please the court; historians became realistic also, gathering facts by accurate research instead of recording fanciful legends;' and, as for reUgion, the type most in demand was the one which gave the indi vidual the most positive and realistic assurances of his own personal salvation. This whole tendency toward individualism and realism was part of the spirit of the ' For the extensive Greek literature of the period see von Christ, Geschichte der griechischen Litteratur, 2. Teil (Miinchen, 1911-12S); Croiset, Histoire de la litterature grecque (Vol. V, Paris, 1899); Susemihl, Geschichte der griechischen Literatur in der Alexandrinerzeit (2 vols., Leipzig, 1891-92). For Latin writers see the standard histories of the literature, e.g., von Schanz, Geschichte der r'omischen Litteratur (Miinchen, 1907-123), or Teuffel, Geschichte der r'omischen Literatur, particularly Vol. II (Leipzig, 1910'), English tr., from the 5th German ed., TeufeVs History of Roman Literature (2 vols., London, 1891-92). A good general survey is given by various authors in "Die griechische und lateinische Literatur und Sprache," Kultur der Gegenwart, I, 8, 3 (Leipzig, 19123). The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 69 age' which produced a class of industrious, self-reUant, and often prosperous citizens. An age of competitive individuaUsm in producing its successful class also begets a class of failures. The "survival of the fittest" in society does not mean elimina tion, but rather distress, for the unfit. This was emi nently true of the Graeco-Roman world, where destitute people were to be found in great numbers, particularly in all the large cities. The ranks of these unfortunates were augmented by vast numbers of slaves, though the latter were often more favored in having a sure support from some good master. Slaves who were sometimes skilled laborers, tradesmen, or educators frequently obtained their freedom and became wealthy citizens," but at other times these freedmen merely swelled the numbers of the needy proletariat who eked out a living with diffi culty in the overcrowded centers of population.^ This proletariat was exceedingly complex. The pressure of ' It is quite possible that these tendencies had begun to appear before Alexander's day (cf . Corssen, tjber Begriff und Wesen des Hellen ismus,'' Zeitschrift fiir die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft, IX [1908], 81-95), but they certainly received a great stimulus in HeUenistic times. ' It is of such that the aristocratic Horace writes {Epode, iv) : Howe'er, proud of your cash, Rome's streets you range, Your breed, mere fortune cannot change. 3 Cf. Beloch, Die Bev'olkerung der griechisch-romischen Welt (Leipzig, 1886); E. Meyer, "Die Bevolkerung des Altertums," Handw'orterbuch der Staatswissenschaften, II (Jena, 1909), 898-913. On the subject of slavery see WaUon, Histoire de I'esclavage dans I'antiquite (3 vols., Paris, 1879'); Schneider, Zur Geschichte der Sklaverei im alien Rom (Zurich, 1892); E. Meyer, Die Sklaverei im Altertum (Dresden, 1898); Calderini, La manomissione e la condizione dei liberti in Grecia (Milano, 1908); Buckland, The Roman Law of Slavery (Cambridge, 1909); Kautsky, Der Ursprung des Christentums (Stuttgart, 1908), pp. 26-69; Steinmann, Die Sklavenfrage in der alten Kirche (Berlin, 1910). 70 The Evolution of Early Christianity competition caused artisans, tradesmen, and laborers to change residence frequently, and the freedmen, who as slaves had been imported from some remote part of the empire, added another heterogeneous element to the already complex society. The total result was a fusion of many nationaUties within the population, particularly in the large cities. Tacitus says,' speaking of Rome, that it was the place into which abominations from all parts of the world flowed together and prospered. A similar complexity in the life of the masses might have been observed, though perhaps in a less degree, at many places in the Mediterranean world. This chaotic and unfortunate condition of society did not pass entirely unheeded by people of that age. The compulsion of common needs drew various classes of persons together in gilds, social groups, and religious societies." Even the rulers concerned themselves with the situation. In Rome, for example, Augustus had taken measures to restrict the extent of manumissions in order that the helpless element of society might not be increased any more than possible. The political authori ties, even if not prompted by humanitarian motives, sought as a police measure to restrain the growth of this element in the population and to provide means, such as the free distribution of corn, for alleviating its distresses. The Cynic-Stoic preachers ministered less materially to contemporary needs, but they aimed to give a more permanent relief by teaching men to endure ' Annals, xv, 44. ' Cf. Poland, Geschichte des griechischen Vereinswesens (Leipzig, 1909); von Pohlmann, Geschichte der sozialen Frage und des Sozialismus in der antiken Welt (Munchen, 1912), particularly II, 415 ff.; Troeltsch, Die Soziallehren der christlichen Kirche (Tiibingen, 1912), pp. 15-178. The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 71 hardship unfalteringly. ReUgion also with a vast num ber of cults and rites offered its consolations and promises to needy humanity, groping its way through what seemed to be a very dark and hostile world. What, finally, was the contemporary religious situa tion ? The Hellenistic world produced no single religion distinctive to itself, unless Christianity be called such. This age was content for the most part to inherit and transform religious legacies from the past. These inher itances were drawn from a variety of sources with the result that religious Ufe exhibited great complexities. But the fusion of diverse elements was never so complete and general as to produce any unified result which could be called the one dominant religiori of the time. Con sequently, the religious life of that day can be best under stood by fixing attention upon some of its more prominent constituent factors and characteristics.' This reUgious syncretism was as complex as society itself. Every nationaUty which contributed to the making of Hellenistic Ufe had something to do with determining the religious character of the new society. When Asia was conquered by the Macedonians the latter had no fixed national faith to impose upon the foreigner, but already in Asia and Egypt various religions had become firmly estabUshed and continued to hold their ground even before the conqueror. Indeed, it was the Orient which supplied the new culture with some of its most important reUgious features. This was quite as true of conditions under the Romans as under the Mace donians. The former brought with them no one domi nant national faith to supply the religious needs of all ' For details see below, chaps, vii-ix; 72 The Evolution of Early Christianity those peoples whose poUtical needs were so often met by Rome. WhUe the Romans were teaching their govern mental science to the Orientals the latter were teaching their reUgions to the Romans. The religious forces of the Graeco-Roman world of New Testament times are so varied that they almost defy even the most general classification. There were many survivals from ancient seats of culture, such as Egypt, Babylonia, Persia, Palestine, Greece, and Rome, while many local faiths native to different groups of people still persisted. Among these survivals from earlier times we are doubtless most famiUar with Judaism, but the disproportionately large place it occupies on our horizon is due to the fact that it has been the object of our con tinued attention while other religious movements within that world have been generally ignored. There were m reality a great many religions which, in conformity to the cosmopoUtan spirit of the age, no longer remained within former national boundaries but became in vary ing degrees world-movements. When the Egyptian, the Babylonian, the Persian, the Syrian, the Greek, or the Roman carried his religion to a foreign city the deities, as would be expected, often lost many of their local char acteristics. Nor was the traveler averse to hearing about other gods if they could offer him new hopes or greater satisfaction for the yearnings of his soul. Indeed, he often encountered ardent missionaries who affirmed that their own peculiar faith was alone worthy of allegiance. These conditions made the period one of great reUgious unrest. Although this syncretism is exceedingly complex, exhibiting various blendings of historic elements, still The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 73 we can distinguish in it certain main tendencies. There is, first, the nationaUstic type of reUgion. Formerly, many of the local historic faiths had also been national, but with the downfaU of the local government which the deity was supposed to protect, and with the elimination of national boundaries by the foreign conqueror, the local deities often lost their national character. The relation between the god and the worshiper became more exclu sively a personal one, in keeping with the strongly indi- viduaUstic tendencies of the time. Even though the national ideal was sometimes retained, as was con spicuously the case with the Jews, when the religion was transplanted to foreign soil, the national emphasis was subordinated to the personal. In general we may say that the people of the Graeco-Roman world had given up the search for a god that could save a nation and were looking for a deity who could save an individual, or a group of individuals set apart as the nucleus of a new society which was conceived to be other-worldly in its essential character. Yet the notion of humanity's solidarity produced a new national ideal stimulated by the unity of empire. Thus emperor worship became a substitute for the national religions of former times. This is a distinct phase of Graeco-Roman religions, which, though embodying earUer elements, was largely a product of this age and had great significance for the life of the time. A second item in these complex religious developments may be termed the religion of philosophy. This was the faith of the educated and thoughtful, but it showed many variations corresponding to different types of philosophy then current. Platonism had some vogue. 74 The Evolution of Early Christianity ''' though it was less popular in the ¦ first century a.d. than in later times when revived in the form of neo- Platonism. The influential philosophies in the first century were more truly HeUenistic products. The two most important schools, each of which had its own distinctive religious significance, were the Epicureans and the Stoics. The former were significant reUgiously chiefly for the criticisms they leveled against traditional notions, while the latter, with their Cynic kinsmen, stood out uniquely as the exponents of a monotheistic faith infused with a vigorous ethical ideaUsm. A third type may be termed the mystery-religions. These were cults of particular deities worshiped by certain groups of people, who had been formaUy initiated into the society of devotees. After observing prescribed religious rites and witnessing at initiation certain sym- boUc performances termed "mysteries,"' they became members of the society and believed that their hope of a blessed immortality was secure. This type of religion was widely current in the Graeco-Roman world in pre- Christian times. Some of the best known of these cults were those of Demeter and Dionysus in Greece and Thrace; Cybele and Attis in Phrygia; Atargatis in Cilicia; Aphrodite and Adonis in Syria; Ash tart and Eshmun (Adon) in Phoenicia; Ish tar and Tammuz in Babylonia; Isis, Osiris, and Serapis in Egypt; and Mithra in Persia. Apart from the Demeter cult, which had become especially localized at Eleusis, these reUgions often traveled far from their native land, following the current of syncretistic life in Graeco-Roman times. With the exception of Mithraism, they were located in ' Herodotus, ii. 171. The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 75 various places about the Mediterranean world a century or more before the opening of our era. Numerous popular superstitions were also rife in this age and so must be noted among its religious char acteristics. Many persons consulted oracles and prac ticed divination. They believed in demon possession, cultivated the art of exorcism, and were in fact the vic tims of vast numbers of superstitious fears and practices. This was true not only of the lower classes, but of many others beside, not even exempting the Roman emperors. Suetonius' Lives of the Caesars gives many illustrations of this fact. Perhaps it was fear of physical harm only which made Augustus flee to the cellar and caused CaUgula to hide under his bed whenever a severe thunderstorm arose, but it was certainly crass super stition that led Augustus, on account of a dream he once had, to attire himself as a beggar on a certain day of the year and soUcit alms in the street. The Graeco-Roman world was not without theologi cal reflection also. There were certain persons who emphasized metaphysical speculation as the summum bonum of religion. This interest was not necessarily embodied in one special movement, but showed itself in various quarters and within different religious circles. It dealt with such problems as the nature of the soul, the character of its relationship to the body on the one hand and to the deity on the other, the process by which the relationship might be readjusted for the soul's welfare, and the ultimate disposition of both body and soul. The relation between the deity and the individual was often defined in terms of mystical union, more or less realistically conceived according to the cultural 76 The Evolution of Early Christianity status or personal bias of the interpreter. Such theo logical speculations seem to have thriven best in the Orient, but they became widely diffused in the Graeco- Roman world. In Pythagoreanism and Orphism, in many of the mystery-cults, in early Gnosticism, and even in Stoicism they had made their influence felt in one form or another already in pre-Christian times. Such was the world in which the early Christians lived. Their association with the ancient faiths which had sur vived to that day, and their contact with those religious tendencies which were more especially distinctive of Hellenistic times furnished the setting for their lives and defined many of the great religious problems which they sought to solve.' The lines along which these ' The foregoing survey of religious conditions is so brief that it may well be supplemented by further references to literature. On the various national religions which formed the background of the Hellenistic age one may consult Lehrbuch der Religions geschichte (edited by Chante- pie de la Saussaye, 2 vols., Tiibingen, 19053); G. F. Moore, History of Religions (New York, 1914), or Toy, Introduction to the History of Reli gions (New York, 1913), where representative works are listed. For ancient Egj^t see Steindorff, Religion of Ancient Egypt (New York, 1905); Wiedemann, Die dgyptische ReUgion (Berlin, 1909'), also article "Religion of Egypt" in Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible (extra vol.. New York, 1904); Erman, Die dgyptische ReUgion (Berlin, 1905, 1909'), English tr., A Handbook of Egyptian Religion (London, 1907); Breasted, Development of ReUgion and Thought in Ancient Egypt (New York, 1912). Of the many workers in the field of Babylonian and Assyrian reUgion see especiaUy Jastrow, Religion of Babylonia and Assyria (Boston, 1898), a long article on the same subject in Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible (extra vol.); also Aspects of ReUgious BeUef and Practice in Babylonia and Assyria (New York, 191 1), Die Religion Babyloniens und Assyriens (Giessen, 1905-12) and Hebrew and Babylonian Traditions (New York, 1914). Cf. also King, Babylonian ReUgion and Mythology (London, 1899); Dhorme, La religion assyro-babylonienne (Paris, 1910). Persian religion is treated by Jackson, "Die iranische ReUgion," in Gieger und Kuhn, Grundriss der iranischen Philologie, II (Stuttgart, The Mediterranean World in New Testament Times 77 surroundings influenced the evolution of early Chris tianity must now be given more detailed consideration. 1904), 612-708; J. H. Moulton, Early Zoroastrianism (London, 1913) and Emly ReUgious Poetry of Persia (Cambridge, 1911); Tiele, The ReU gion of the Iranian Peoples (London, 191 2) and Geschiedenis van den Godsdienst in de oudheid tot op Alexander den Groote, II (Amsterdam, 1902). In addition to such reference works as Famell, Cults of the Greek States (5 vols., Oxford, 1 896-1 909) and Gruppe, Griechische Mythologie und ReUgions geschichte (Munchen, 1906), the more recent studies on Greek reUgion are Jane Harrison, Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion (Cambridge, 1903, 1908') and Themis (Cambridge, 1912); Famell, The Higher Aspects of Greek ReUgion (New York, 1912); and Murray, Four Stages of Greek Religion (New York, 1912). Roman reUgion has been treated in several standard works. Among the latest are Carter, The ReUgious Life of Ancient Rome (Boston, 191 1); Fowler, The ReUgious Experience of the Roman People (New York, 1911); Wissowa, Religion und Kultus der Romer (Munchen, 1902, 1912=). The last-named work is rich in reference to the literature. The reUgion of other parts of the Mediterranean world and the syncretistic developments of Graeco-Roman times have not been studied so generally and comprehensively. In addition to the works to be cited below in connection with special topics, see Cumont, Les religions orien tates dans le paganisme remain (Paris, 1906, 1909'), EngUsh tr., Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism (Chicago, 191 1), and Astrology and ReUgion among Greeks and Romans (New York, 1912); Reitzenstein, Poimandres (Leipzig, 1904) and Die hellenistischen Mysterienreligionen (Leipzig, 1910); Otto, Priester und Tempel im hellenistischen Aegypten (2 vols., Leipzig, 1905-8); Glover, The Conflict of Religions in the Early Roman Empire (London, 1909); Schmidt, Kultiibertragungen (Giessen, 1910); Toutain, Les cultes patens dans Vempire remain, I, ii (Paris, 1911). For literature on Judaism see below, chap, iv, passim; and on Buddhism in its relation to Christianity, p. 194, n. 2. CHAPTER IV THE EARLY CHRISTIANS' JEWISH CONNECTIONS Among the ethnic faiths which had survived in the Mediterranean world of the first century a.d., Judaism was the one with which Christians at the outset were most intimately associated. The relationship was closest in Palestine, but it was not confined exclusively to this territory. Christian preachers even in gentile lands must have been in almost constant contact with Jews, who were scattered widely over the Roman empire. In Palestine, however, the association was particu larly close. The antecedents of the Christian move ment in the first period of its career were all Jewish, and in the main also Palestinian. While we must not assume that life within Palestine in pre-Christian times might not already have received important contribu tions from without, we may affirm that the earliest Christians derived their chief religious heritage directly from their Palestinian environment. This suppUed to them the initial religious forces later fused into that new movement which in time came to be differentiated from Juda^m, and to be distinguished by the name "Chris tianity." It was the life of Palestine that furnished the chief problems with which the first Christians were concerned; it was this background which- gave them John the Baptist and Jesus, from whom they derived so much; and it was Judaism which had provided them with religious training from earUest childhood. The general persistence of Jewish features within primitive 78 The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 79 Christianity was a perfectly natural consequence of existing conditions. It is not necessary at this point to give a detailed account of first-century Judaism. WhUe there are stUl many unsolved problems in this field, in general it is familiar ground today, or may easily be made such by consulting some of the many valuable treatises upon the subject. For our present purposes a brief survey of the more prominent features in the Jewish religion of the first century a.d. will suffice.' The poUtical history of the Hebrew people had much to do with shaping the development of their reUgion. At one time or another they had been subject to every important poUtical power that had arisen in that ancient world. The Egyptians, the Babylonians, the Assyrians, ' Some of the more important works on the subject are: Gratz, Geschichte der Juden, IH (Leipzig, 1905-6'); Keim, Geschichte Jesu von Nazara, I (Zurich, 1867), English tr.. History of Jesus of Nazara (London, 1876) ; Toy, Jtidaism and Christianity, A Sketch of the Progress of Thought from the Old Testament to the New Testament (Boston, 1890); Schiirer, Geschichte des jiidischen Volkes im Zeitalter Jesu Christi (3 vols., Leipzig, 1901-9''; see especiaUy I, 4ff., for literature), EngUsh tr., History ofthe Jewish People in the Time of Jesus Christ (New York, 1891) ; O. Holtzmann, Neutestamentliche Zeitgeschichte (Tubingen, 1895, 1906=); Mathews, History of New Testament Times in Palestine (New York, 1899, 1910'); Thackeray, The Relation of St. Paul to Contemporary Jewish Thought (New York, 1900); Bousset, Die Religion des Judentums im neutestamentUchen Zeitalter (BerUn, 1903, 1906'); Oesterley and Box, ReUgion and Worship of the Synagogue (New York, 1907); Fairweather, The Background of the Gospels, or Judaism in the Period between the Old and the New Testaments (New York, 1908) ; Felten, Neutestamentliche Zeitgeschichte, oder Jtidentum und Heidentum zur Zeit Christi und der Apostel (Mainz, 1910); H. J. Holtzmann, Lehrbuch der neutestament Uchen Theologie (Tubingen, 1911''), I, 27-159; Bertholet, Die jiidische ReUgion von der Zeit Esras bis zum Zeitalter Christi (Tubingen) 1911); Juster, Les Juifs dans I'empire romaine, leur condition juridique, gco- nomique et sociale (2 vols., Paris, 1914). 8o The Evolution of Early Christianity the Persians, the Macedonians, and the Romans all exercised, at different times, dominion over Palestine. In addition to this pressure of foreign influence from without the Jews themselves pressed out into the life of the surrounding peoples. They had estabUshed important colonies in Egypt and Babylonia at an early date, and in Graeco-Roman times they were so numerous in every land that Strabo remarks, if Josephus reports him correctly, "It is difficult to find a place in the habit able earth that has not admitted this tribe of men and is not possessed by them."' In spite of both foreign oppression and residence in foreign lands, the Jews in a remarkable degree preserved intact their national individuaUty. This was due primarily to the strong nationalistic character of their religion. They beUeved that in days of old Yahweh had chosen them to be a pecuUar people whom he would one day exalt to a position of primacy among the nations. Political reverses had not shattered their hopes, for their prophets had declared that these misfortunes were a consequence of the people's sin and not a denial of the Deity's power. He was still the God of Israel and would ultimately fulfil his promises when his people had shown themselves worthy of his favor, consequently the ruling motive in life was to learn and to do his wiU. Loyalty to this ideal and the consequent isolation it involved set ' Josephus, Ant., XIV, vii, 2. See further on the dispersion of the Jewish people, Harnack, The Mission and Expansion of Christianity, I, 1-18; T. Reinach, article "Diaspora" iu the Jewish Encyclopedia (New York, 1903), IV, 559 S.; Schurer, Geschichte, usw., IIIi, 1-188, English tr.. History of the Jewish People, H, ii, 220 ff., and article "Diaspora" in Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible, extra vol., pp. 91-109; Juster, op. cit., pp. 179-209. The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 8i the Jews apart as a distinct people, whether in Palestine or among the Gentiles. The three chief institutions used for realizing their ideal were the temple, the synagogue, and the Scrip tures. The temple, while it stood, was the central sanctuary, serving as a focal point for the maintenance of the national faith. This was the visible dwelling of Yahweh, and all loyal Jews contributed regularly toward its support. The synagogue was in many ways a much more important institution, for it furnished a local raUying-point for the life of particular communities. Every Jew, no matter how far removed from the Holy City, longed to visit the Jerusalem temple at least once in his Ufetime, but this hope, often long deferred and sometimes never realized, would alone hardly have been vital enough to preserve the unity of the scattered nation. The synagogue was really the institution which kept alive the national faith. Hence the destruction of the temple did not materially affect the religion of the Jewish people as a whole. Their sacred writings were the chief means by which the Jews believed they could learn to do God's will. This was the one source of authority from which rules were derived for the direction of every phase of conduct. From the day of birth until the day of death the Ufe of the true Jew was ordered according to the divine instruction, expressed or impUed in the Torah, the "Teaching" in which God had revealed his will to his chosen people. But already in the first century a.d. these books were ancient documents and so had to be expounded in order to be understood and made avaUable for guidance in daily living. This necessity 82 The Evolution of Early Christianity produced the scribe, who played a very important part in the making of later Judaism. The exposition of the Scriptures involved the task of finding therein rules for conduct in every sphere of activity, incentives for the cultivation of moral character, materials for the construction of religious doctrine, and stimuU for the enrichment of religious experience. These three great institutions — the temple, the synagogue, and the Torah — made the Jews a unique people, distinguishing them, whether in Palestine or in the Diaspora, from all their contemporaries . Though the Jews were thus distinct from other peoples, their own life had many complexities. The popular notion, that Judaism in the first century was a uniform system of barren legal observances, is not true to facts. Like all real life it was subject to specific environmental forces, which produced a variety of tend encies even in the realm of religion. In the first place, politics had exerted a strongly determining influence upon the Jews from times of old, but in the Graeco- Roman period new problems arose producing distinct parties such as Sadducees, Pharisees, and Zealots. Strife between these rival parties had a marked effect upon religion as well as upon the destiny of the Jewish state. Society also was complex and diversified. Some persons were hospitable to foreign manners, while others were bitterly hostile. The population included prosper ous citizens as well as those who lived in great poverty. Even in matters of religion there were many variations. The Torah was expounded differently by different rabbis, who had their respective followers; the national hope was variously interpreted in different circles; and even The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 83 ritual observances were made the subject of divergent opinions, as the Essene movement alone shows. The conditions under which the Jewish people lived, particularly from the Exile on, had tended to diversify their interests. Upon many of their numbers influences from Babylonia and Persia had been acting vigorously for a long time. Greek influences also became very powerful among certain circles a century or more before the Christian era, and under the Romans the pressure of these and other foreign forces continued to be felt. These influences were not simply poUtical; they were also reUgious, and stimulated a religious reaction on the part of the Jewish people. As the circumstances varied so the reaction varied, resulting in the formation of different sects within Judaism and the advocacy of various opinions on matters of religion. It is not at all improbable that the reference of II Esdras 14:46 to the seventy esoteric books, in addition to the twenty- four in common use, correctly represents different Unes of reUgious interest, such as we see, for example, in the Essenes and in the Zadokite sectaries. One who sup poses that Judaism in New Testament times was a thoroughly unified system of doctrine, ritual, or conduct must have observed but very superficially the actual conditions of Ufe in that age. Yet this diversity was mainly a matter of emphasis. Members of different parties were none the less Jews because they found their special interests leading in different directions. A Philo or a Josephus may have Uved in a very different world of reaUty from that of a Judaean rabbi, but they all admired alike their ancient reUgious heritage and were equaUy ready to undertake. 84 The Evolution of Early Christianity each in his own way, the task of its defense. Each used data from the past and under the stimulus of his own peculiar environment worked out an interpretation answering to his own needs. Some persons dwelt upon the legaUstic features of the ancient faith, others found their inspirations in the older prophets, others meditated on the teachings of the sages, others elaborated the apocalyptic imagery suggested in Daniel, and others exalted the national ideal of an earthly prince. The environment also varied. In some circles the horizon was narrow, extending only to the Umits of a local Jewish community, in others a new impetus to religious think ing had been suppUed by contact with Babylonia or Persia, while in still others the new stimulus had come in from the Graeco-Roman world. Yet with aU this variety in point of view and environment there was no thought of disloyalty to Jewish tradition. Since all these variations arose in response to vital conditions, they did not tend to disintegrate but really served to strengthen the life of Judaism. The early Christians were in close touch with Judaism in many of its varied phases. While a very close con nection between the two reUgions is generally admitted, the nature of the relationship is not always clearly defined. The fact of extensive common possessions on the part of Jews and early Christians no longer calls for demonstration, nor are the main lines of agree ment in serious need of restatement; but the genetic character of the relationship is a question of primary importance, particularly for our present study. Was Christianity connected with Judaism in a vital way, or did the connection consist merely in the common The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 85 possession of a quantity of static items of theological speculation or traditional customs which were ultimately to be discarded in order that the new reUgion might be free to express itself according to its own original constitution ? The abundant use of the Old Testament in the New seems to prove that the old and the new religions were intimately related at the outset, yet there is also ample evidence that the breach between the two was both wide and deep even before the close of the first century a.d. According to the New Testament representation, Jesus was in almost constant conflict with the scribes and Pharisees who finally brought about his death, Stephen was stoned by the Jewish mob at the instigation of reUgious leaders who were zealous for the traditions of the fathers, Paul after his conversion was persistently persecuted by his own countrymen, and the antagonism between Jews and Christians grew more and more bitter as time advanced. In view of this early and continued hostility, how is it possible to think of a close genetic kinship between the two reUgions ? Among Christians the prevaiUng method of maintaining this connection has been to pass over later Judaism as a perversion of ancient faith and to connect the religion of Jesus and the apostles most closely with that of the old Hebrew worthies. The fulfilment of messianic prophecy in the person of Jesus is the main link connecting the old and the new orders. He was the redeemer whom God, from the day Adam and Eve were driven out of Eden, had appointed to deUver mankind and had foreshadowed in aU the prophets. In addition to the fulfilment of messianic 86 The Evolution of Early Christianity predictions, the more truly spiritual and ethical elements of Old Testament religion are also said to be genuinely perpetuated within Christian circles only, and the Mosaic legislation is believed to have reached its only correct interpretation and application among members of the new community. So the argument runs, in the traditional Christian apologetic. Furthermore, Christians early discovered, by means of the exegetical methods then in vogue, many Old Testament passages to indicate that God had intended Christianity to supplant Judaism. On this hypothesis, Jews, in the interim between the Old and New Testa ments, had become bUnd to the intent of prophecy, had lost the spiritual vision of the ancients, and had con verted the teaching of Moses and his successors into a deadening casuistic legalism. Therefore God rescued the treasures of revelation from degradation at the hands of the Pharisees and committed them to the care and keeping of Christians. The fall of Jerusalem and the dispersion of the homeless people were cited as further proof that God had withdrawn his favor from the descendants of his chosen people and had transferred his affections to Christians alone.' The correctness of this deprecatory estimate of Juda ism in relation to the origin of Christianity has often been called in question. Naturally the Jews have always ' To cite a typical statement of this opinion, Origen {Cels., H, 8) says: "For it is indeed manifest that when they beheld Jesus they did not see who he was, and when they heard him they did not understand from his words the divinity that was in him and which transferred God's providential care, hitherto exercised over the Jews, to his converts from the heathen. Therefore we may see that after the advent of Jesus the Jews were altogether abandoned and possess now none of what were The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 87 protested against this interpretation of their history. They will not concede that they have perverted the faith of their fathers, nor do they beUeve that they have been abandoned by God. On the contrary, they still claim to be his chosen people and the custodians of the divine oracles. A recent defender of their position says: "The Jew still beUeves that the mission of Israel is a real living power in the world of today. To live the true Jewish life is the highest ideal he knows. He has learnt from the prophets and from history that Israel has been chosen to be a 'light to the Gentiles,' but he has also been taught that the light of Israel is God.'" Likewise from the standpoint of history the tradi tional view of Christianity's relation to contemporary Jewish religion has been subjected to several criticisms. Among other things, we are told that the character of Judaism in Jesus' day has usually been misrepresented. Many of the Gospels' unfavorable statements regard ing the Pharisees are said not only to be untrue but to have been prompted by Christian hatred of Jewish opponents. Just as Christians think the Talmud gives a grossly distorted picture of Jesus and his followers — when it does not utterly ignore them — in order to serve the interests of Jewish antagonists, so many Jews see considered their ancient glories, so that there is no indication of any divinity abiding amongst them For what nation is an exile from their own metropolis, and from the place sacred to the worship of their fathers, save the Jews only ? And these calamities they have suffered because they were a most wicked nation which, although guilty of many other sins, yet had been punished so severely for none as for those that were committed against our Jesus.'' ' G. Friedlander, Hellenism and Christianity (London, 1912), p. x. 88 The Evolution of Early Christianity in the Gospels a simUar bias against the Pharisees.' Not only are the sweeping charges made against them in the New Testament said to be false, but as a class the Pharisees are declared to have been exponents of a genuinely spiritual religion, while Judaism as a whole in Jesus' time was not so utterly devoid of vital spiritual ity as its critics have frequently affirmed. This opinion, so stoutly defended by Jews,^ has of late found sup porters even within Christian circles.' ' Among recent expressions on this point, Montefiore's is one of the more moderate. Commenting on Mark 7:9-13, he says that the usual interpretation, which makes the Pharisees and scribes set duty to the temple above obligation to parents, is "in flat contradiction to the law as laid down by the Mishnah, as commented on by the Talmud, and as universaUy accepted and interpreted by all the Jewish codifiers." Furthermore, "the truth is that the rabbis taught a tremendous respect and reverence for parents. In this matter they are perfectly sound; indeed on family relations they are keener than Jesus" {Synoptic Gos pels [New York, 1909], I, 164 ff.). "We should expect "orthodox" Jewish apologists to insist on the ideal character of Judaism in every stage of its history. But even "liberal" Jews, who give more attention to historical considerations, find themselves compeUed to disagree at various points with such Christian expositions of Judaism as Weber's System der altsynagogalen paldstinishen Theologie (Leipzig, i88o; 2. Aufl., Die Lehren des Talmud, 1886; 3. Aufl., Jiidische Theologie auf Grund des Talmud und verwandter Schriften, 1S97); Schiirer's Geschichte des jiidischen Volkes, usw., par ticularly the chapter on "Das Leben unter dem Gesetz," II, 545-79, English tr.. History ofthe Jewish People, etc., II, ii, 90-125; or Bousset's ReUgion des Judentums. For recent "liberal" Jewish defense of the "spiritual" character of Pharisaism, see Montefiore, op. cit., also Origin and Growth of ReUgions (London, 1892, pp. 465-552), The Relig ious Teaching of Jesus (New York, 1910); Schechter, Some Aspects of Rabbinic Theology (New York, 1909); Horodezky, "Zwei Richtungen im Judentum," Archiv fiir Religionswissenschaft, XV (1912), 99-136; Abelson, The Immanence of God in Rabbinical Literature (New York, 1912) and Jewish Mysticism (London, 1913). 3 E.g., Hart, Hope of CathoUck Jtidaism (Oxford, 1910), thinks the idea of hope with the Jews has always been fundamentaUy and con sciously a personal trust in God; and Herford, Pharisaism: Its Aim and Method (New York, 1912), defends most vigorously the spirituaUty The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 89 In the second place, the Christian claim for unique originaUty in the teaching of Jesus and the apostles has often been denied by Jewish critics. The main content of personal religion as depicted, for example, in the Sermon on the Mount, is said to offer no features of importance not already current in the teaching of the rabbis. On its ethical and spiritual side the New Testa ment as a whole is found to be mainly a fruit of Pharisaic Judaism. That which differentiates it from Judaism, making it inferior and false from the Jewish point of view, is its doctrine of Jesus' messiahship with its accom panying belief in his supernatural personaUty. When these items have been set aside the spiritual and ethical residuum of New Testament religion is declared to be only an appropriation from contemporary Judaism.' A disposition on the part of certain modern scholars to find Christianity's "essence" in Jesus' teaching of the Pharisees: "Why should not the Christian be glad to own that the Jew, even the Pharisee, knew more of the deep things of God than he had supposed, and after a way which was not the Christian way, yet loved the Lord his God with heart and soul and strength and mind — ¦ yes, and his neighbor as himself?" (p. 333). 'Among older works the following are representative: Nork, Rab- binische Quellen und Parallelen zu neutestamentUchen Schriftstellen (Leipzig, 1839); Gratz, Geschichte der Juden; Griinbaum, Die Sitten- lehre des Judenthums (Mannheim, 1867; 2. Aufl., Strassburg, 1878); Rodrigues, Les origines du. Sermon du Monlagne (Paris, 1868); Duschak, Die Moral der Evangelien und des Talmud (Briinn, 1877); Schreiber, Die Principien des Judenthums verglichen mit denen des Christentums (Leipzig, 1877). Cf. more recently G. Friedlander, The Jewish Sources of tke Sermon on the Mount (London, 1911). Christian interpreters have often sought iUustrative materials in later Jewish writings but have not thought the New Testament to be secondary, e.g., J. Lightfoot, Horae hebraicae et talmudicae in quatuor Evangelistas (Leipzig, 1684); Schottgen, Horae hebraicae et talmudicae in universum Novum Testa mentum (Dresden and Leipzig, 1733); Meuschen, Novum Testamentum ex Talmude et antiquitatibus Hebraeorum illustratum (Leipzig, 1736); go The Evolution of Early Christianity regarding spiritual sonship to God and love to one's neighbor raises more sharply than ever the problem of originaUty in this phase of New Testament reUgion. When the uniqueness of the new movement is not found in its christological and soteriological doctrines, but in the superiority of its ethical-religious ideals, an inferior estimate is readily implied for this side of Jewish religion in Jesus' day. But Jewish scholars strenuously object to this implication. Even when they admit that Jesus was a remarkable teacher possessed of keen spiritual insight, they still claim him as a true son of Israel. His greatness is but additional evidence for the greatness of their ancestral faith, so that Judaism and "essential" Christianity are at the outset practically identical. The acceptance of this conclusion leads Montefiore to remark that "in future Christianity and Judaism wiU be able to shake hands over the Sermon on the Mount and the fundamental elements in the moral and religious doctrine of Jesus." Adopting Wernle's view' that what is crucial in Jesus is "trust in God, purity of heart, compassion, humility, forgiveness, aspiration — this and nothing else," and that he who does the will of God as thus expressed in the Sermon on the Mount is "Jesus' Wettstein [Wetstenius], Novum Testamentum Graecum (Amsterdam, 1751-52); T. Robinson, The EvangeUsts and the Mishna (London, 1859); Siegfried, Analecta rabbinica (Jena, 1875); A. Wiinsche, Neue Beitrdge zur Erlduterung der Evangelien aus Talmud und Midrasch (Gottingen, 1S78); Bennett, The Mishnah as Illustrating the Gospels (Cambridge, 1884); Herford, Christianity in Talmud and Midrash (London, 1903). E. Bischoff, Jesus und die Rabbinen (Leipzig, 1905), contends for Jesus' absolute originality. ^Sources of Our Knowledge of the Life of Jesus (London, 1907), pp. 162 f. (translated frora the German, Die Quellen des Lebens Jesu [Tubingen, 1905, 1913']). The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 91 mother and sister and brother." Montefiore beUeves that "there have been very many Jewish mothers and sisters and brothers of Jesus all these long years from Jesus until now.'" Christianity, then, began as a new awakening within Judaism, a revival and elaboration of the more distinctly ethical and spiritual aspects of prophetic reUgion. Thus Christianity is connected with Jewish religion through the medium of the ancient prophets, as Christians have so generaUy maintained, but this bond of union is ethics and not christological dogma. The Judaism with which Montefiore thus identifies "essential" Christianity is itself an "essence" of prophetism, which he thinks had fallen into decay until revived by Jesus. But Jewish writers of a more " ortho dox" type reject this supposition and affirm that con temporary rabbinism itself preserved the very elements which Christian authors like Harnack and Wernle find to have constituted the "essence" of Christianity.^ Even though nothing of a notable character is discerned in the reUgion of Jesus, the breach between him and the Pharisees, who are taken to represent the best in con temporary Judaism, is found to have been far less serious ' Synoptic Gospels, I, cvii f. ' For Jewish reaction upon Harnack's Das Wesen des Christentums see "L'Esprit du Christianisme et du Judaisme," by "M. L.," Revue des eludes juives, LI (1905-6), 191-216, and LII (1906-7), 1-23, where the principal literature on the subject is noted. For monographs see Back, Das Wesen des Judentums (Lamm, 1905); Eschelbacher, Das Judentum und das Wesen des Christentums (Berlin, 1905); Giidemann, Jiidische Apologetik (Glogau, 1906); Bergmann, Jiidische Apologetik im neutesta mentUchen Zeitalter (BerUn, 1908). Brief excerpts from many writers are given in de le Roi's Neujiidische Stimmen Uber Jesum Christum (Leipzig, 1910). 92 The Evolution of Early Christianity than the Gospel writers assume. In fact, his death, for which the New Testament makes the Pharisees chiefly responsible, is said to have been brought abqHt by the poUtical rather than the reUgious authorities. The blame should be placed upon the Sadducean high priest and the Romans, and not upon the Pharisees with whom Jesus was in essential harmony.' According to this interpretation the Christian movement did not become noticeably differentiated from Judaism until after Jesus' death when certain of his followers began to preach his messiahship, to reverence him as God, and to proclaim his speedy coming in judgment. These features are conceded to have been new — in so far as they were not borrowed from heathen sources— but the ideals and content of personal religious living within ' This opinion has been held by Jews of various schools since the publication of L. Philippson's Haben wirkUch die Juden Jesum gekreu- zigt? (Berlin, 1866). For its more recent advocacy see Hirsch, The Crucifixion from a Jewish Standpoint (New York, 1892, 1908'); Drucker, The Trial of Jesus from Jewish Sources (New York, 1907); Montefiore, Synoptic Gospels, I, 345 ff.; Klein, Ar Jesus en historisk personlighet? (Stockholm, 1910); Chwolson, Uber die Frage, ob Jesus gelebt hat (Leip zig, 1910). Biichler, Das Synedrion in Jerusalem, usw. (Wien, 1902), posits two sanhedrins in Jerusalem, one a body of priestly authorities connected with the temple and the other the Sanhedrin proper, composed of scribes and rabbis. It was the former assembly which condemned Jesus. The French Protestant scholar, Goguel, finds two trials narrated in the Gospels, one conducted by the Jews and the other by the Romans. The latter alone is historical. Pilate had consulted the Sanhedrin merely to make sure that his extreme action against Jesus would not be resented by that body. The Sanhedrin had taken no initiative in the matter, nor had it any real part in carrying out PUate's program. Later he threw the responsibUity upon the Jews, and this idea was elaborated in Christian polemic against them {Juijs et Romains dans I'histoire de la passion [Paris, 1911]). For further literature see Juster, Les Juifs dans I'empire remain, II, 137 f. The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 93 the new community are thought to have been suppUed by contemporary Judaism. Hence bitter antagonism toward the Jews, although prominent in the New Testa ment account of Jesus' Ufe, must belong historically to a subsequent period. It cannot have been the atti tude of Jesus, or of the earliest Christians, who are assumed to have had no thought of a break with Jewish reUgion. Moriz Friedlander, a Jewish writer of the "liberal" school, offers a still different interpretation of the genetic relationship between the two religions. Although he does not trace the line of succession through orthodox legaUsm, he still gives the new movement excellent Jewish connections. At the beginning of the Christian era the Jews of Palestine, he beUeves, comprised several distinct and rather sharply differentiated classes such as Pharisees, Apocalyptists, Essenes, ' Am-ha 'arets, and Minim. Heterogeneous elements, represented for instance by the Wisdom writers and the Therapeutae, were likewise discernible in Hellenistic Judaism. Since the Pharisees are assumed to be a distinctly separate class of bigoted nationaUsts and rigid formalists, genuine Hebrew faith can have been truly perpetuated only outside these official circles, and it is from these extra- official sources that the true Jewish heritage of Chris tianity is derived. Genetically it was most closely akin to the 'Am-ha 'arets,' who were the pious people of the land and who were, therefore, opposed to the Pharisees. " The r61e of the 'Am-ha'arets in the first century a.d. is very uncertain. Cf. Schiirer, Geschichte, usw., II, 468 f.; Biichler, Der galildische 'Am ha-Aretz des zweiten Jahrhunderts (Wien, 1906); Monte fiore, Synoptic Gospels, I, Ixxvi. 94 The Evolution of Early Christianity The connection with Essenism was also close. These tendencies were represented in the movement of John the Baptist, they were perpetuated by Jesus, and so formed the basis of the Christian movement. Formerly Friedlander located the transition from Judaism to Christianity in Hellenistic lands, but in his Synagoge und Kirche he definitely fixes upon Perea as the place of Christianity's birth.' The idea of connecting primitive Christianity with certain Jewish sects instead of with the main line of Palestinian Judaism had already been advocated before Friedlander wrote. In the early eighteenth century the English Deist Toland wrote a treatise entitled Nazarenus, or Jewish, Gentile and Mahometan Christianity, in which he made primitive Christianity an Ebionite movement beside which the Pauline movement later arose.^ The name Ebionite was suggested by the mention of a Jewish-Christian heresy bearing that title in certain of the Church Fathers.^ A century after Toland another English writer, Thomas DeQuincey, suggested that ' Note particularly his Zur Entstehungsgeschichte des Christentums (Wien, 1894), Das Judentum in der vorchristUchen griechischen Welt: Ein Beitrag zur Entstehungsgeschichte des Christentums (Wien, 1897), Geschichte der jiidischen Apologetik ais 'Vor geschichte des Christentums (Ziirich, 1903), Die religi'osen Bewegungen innerhalb des Judentums im Zeitalter Jesu (BerUn, 1905), and Synagoge und Kirche in ihren Anfdngen (Berlin, 1908). ' This division of early Christianity into an Ebionite and a Pauline school resembles the antithesis "Petrine" and "Pauline" made by Baur. On Toland as a forerunner of the Tiibingen school see Patrick, "Two EngUsh Forerunners of the Tiibingen School: Thomas Morgan and John Toland," Theological Review, No. LIX (1877), pp. 562-603. 3 E.g., Irenaeus, Haer., I, xxvi, 2; Hippolytus, Haer., VII, 35! Origen, Cc/s., V, 61. The word "Ebionites" (ni:i"'nSj!) signifies poor people. The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 95 Christianity was a perpetuation of Essenism. This notion had begun to be used in the first half of the nine teenth century as material forming the basis for fanciful lives of Jesus, his skill at miracles being ascribed to wisdom derived from early association with the Essenes, under whose direction he was assumed to have conducted his public activity.' This type of interpretation is now confined almost exclusively to writers who deny outright the historicity of Jesus. These Jewish sects, which are sometimes said to be largely influenced by non-Jewish ideas, are thought to furnish sufficient vitality to account fpr the origin of the new religion. What is to be said of the view, so generally held by Christians and so commonly denied by Jews, that Chris tianity at the start had essentiaUy no relation to con temporary Judaism? While Jewish opinion is often discounted — for Judaism as well as Christianity may have its zealous apologists — it is an undeniable fact that the early Christians were closely associated with Jews, were indeed Jews themselves, and so are likely to have been as truly obligated to their immediate environment as they were to ancient prophetism. While members of the primitive community may have been distinctly original in many respects, and may have drawn freely upon the Old Testament, it does not follow that they were not intimately related to the reUgious situation which produced them, and upon which they in turn reacted most immediately in their efforts to measure up to contemporary reUgious demands. Their problems were not merely their own personal concern, but were ' See Case, Historicity of Jesus (Chicago, 1912), pp. 32-34, for literature on this subject. 96 The Evolution of Early Christianity framed if not indeed answered with reference to the pressing demands of the day. Under these circum stances early Christianity in Palestine must be set into much closer relation with contemporary Judaism than some interpreters of Christian origins have been accus tomed to allow. The supposition of Christianity's unique independence is tenable only on the hypothesis that Judaism at this time was, in the estimation of early Christians, utterly devoid of all reUgious values. But this conclusion is far from self-evident, and a closer study of primitive Christianity raises grave doubts regarding its vaUdity. On the other hand, the historical conditions are not satisfied by the disposition, manifest among some Jew ish writers, to deny all distinctiveness to the new reUgion. Had nascent Christianity been only a com posite of excerpts from Judaism there would have been no room for that display of creative personal leadership so characteristic of the new movement, nor would the conditions have been such as to bring about sharp antagonism between the two reUgions. The latter phenomenon is particularly striking. Though the evangelists may have overstressed its prominence in the time of Jesus, it cannot be doubted, quite apart from any dispute as to who was immediately responsible for Jesus' death, that he was unacceptable to many Jews. It would have been absurd for the Gospel writers in their anti-Jewish polemic to make Jesus so eminently persona non grata to the Jews of his day if exactly the contrary relationship had been the historical fact. Granting that the notion of hostility may be over emphasized by the evangelists, we are still forced to The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 97 beUeve that it had some basis in fact.' And the same situation is seen in the experience of the primitive com munity. While the early believers did not immediately break with their ancestral faith there was something about them which aroused the hostiUty of their Jewish brethren. Even if the description in Acts is held to be historically uncertain at many points, there can be no reasonable doubt about the bitter hostility of the Jewish leaders both before and after Paul's conversion.^ When the Gospels were written it is perfectly evident that the cleft had become so wide between the Christians and their Jewish kinsmen that hope of ever bridging the chasm was beginning to be abandoned. Little as the early Christians may have desired to break with the faith of their fathers, there was something sufficiently distinctive about them to invoke Jewish hostility and to force separation. Yet this enmity does not imply the complete lack of all connection between the two religions, nor must we con clude that this relationship can have been maintained only through the medium of Jewish sects. It would not be inherently impossible to suppose that Christian ity grew out of a Jewish sectarian movement with which John the Baptist and Jesus were alUed. The difficulty with this hypothesis is the impossibihty of finding substantial historical evidence for the existence of any sect which has sufficient likeness to Christianity to be reasonably called its source. Essenes, Zealots, Thera peutae, and the like, aU fail to meet the requirements. ' Cf. I Thess. 2:15. Paul is likely to have been accurately informed on this point, however much one may suspect the statements of later writers. = Gal. 1:13; I Cor. 15:9; Phil. 3:6. 98 The Evolution of Early Chislianity If one could assume the existence of a well-defined sect of Messianists in pre-Christian times it might be made the special source of the new movement, but apart from Zealot enthusiasts — with whom the early Christians are certainly not to be reckoned in spite of the fact that Jesus apparently was condemned on the charge of being a messianic pretender — there is no intimation that such a sect existed as a sect. The early Christians' connec tions are with contemporary Judaism as a whole, and not with some incidental phase of that religion. Among Christian scholars, F. C. Baur was one of the first to recognize a real point of attachment between primitive Christianity and contemporary Judaism, yet he accepted as historical the New Testament representa tion of a sharp antagonism between the two reUgions. How was it possible for Christianity to have real Jewish connections and at the same time to be strongly anti- Jewish? Baur solved this problem by positing two conflicting divisions within Christianity itself. One was a Jewish party led by Peter and his associates in Jerusalem where legaUsm was emphasized in agree ment with strictly Jewish principles, and the other was a Hellenistic party estabUshed by Paul in his fight for freedom from the law.' This did not mean that Jeru salem Christianity was not fundamentaUy different from Judaism, or that Paul, on the other hand, was entirely free from Jewish influences. Since Baur was ' Of Baur's many works see especiaUy "Die Christuspartei in der corinthischen Gemeinde," Tiibinger Zeitschrift fiir Theologie, Heft. 4 (1831), 61-206; Paulus, der Apostel Jesu Christi (Stuttgart, 1845, 1866-67=), Enghsh tr., Paul the Apostle (Edinburgh, 1873-75); and Vorksungen uber neutestamentliche Theologie (herausgegeben von F. F. Baur, Leipzig, 1864). Cf. above, p. 13. The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 99 not so much interested in explaining how Christianity arose out of Judaism as in accounting for the early transition of the new religion from the Jewish to the gentile thought-world, he concerned himself for the most part with but one item in Christianity's Jewish connections. That, was the position of the ceremonial law as related to the doctrine of redemption. In contrast with Paul's gospel of freedom, the Petrine community still adhered to the Mosaic ordinance of circumcision as a necessary accompaniment of faith. Apart from this main difference the two parties had much in com mon, and even the conservatives seem, in Baur's thought, to represent a religion which is quite distinct from Juda ism. When compared with the Pharisees, Jesus is found to have been unique in his emphasis upon ethical inwardness and personal piety. To some extent the early community did, indeed, obscure his teaching by dragging it down to their lower spiritual level, yet their new religion was primarily a heritage from Jesus and so transcended all immediate Jewish connections. Although Paul was the first to make a formal break with Judaism he was but carrying to a logical issue what was already impUcit in Jesus' own teaching and what was fundamental to the Jerusalem community's faith in Christ.' ' Since Baur is often thought to have divided primitive Christianity into two sharply differentiated parties, one being emphaticaUy Jewish and the other distinctly Greek, it may be weU to note how closely he follows the traditional view of Christianity's essential independence of contemporary Judaism, and how truly a unit both the Petrine and the Pauline parties are in this respect. He says: " In dem Apostel Paulus war zuerst der wesentliche Unterschied des Christentums vom Judentum, die Unmoglichkeit, auf der Grundlage des Judentums das von Christus IOO The Evolution of Early Christianity Baur's recognition of a cleft within early Christianity has given direction to the main lines of much subsequent discussion. Taking their cue from him, some inter preters divide Jewish Christianity itself into two sec tions, the former representing the chief apostles who stood quite aloof from Judaism except for the matter of circumcision, and the latter being a body of Judaizers who adhered tenaciously to hereditary customs and beliefs.' While the primitive apostles kept the "pure" gospel in the foreground, to that extent being in harmony with Paul, the Judaizers remained so seriously entangled with Jewish religion that they were scarcely worthy of the name Christian, and so ere long feU back into the Jewish fold. By this method the Christianity of the first believers as a whole is made to transcend Judaism, it derives its main content directly from Jesus, distinctly contemporary Judaism exerts no essential influence upon the new faith, and its Jewish heritage is reaUy only the Old Testament reUgion. Another line of development from Baur makes Paul its point of departure. His breach with the Palestinian erworbene HeU sich zuzueignen, zum bestimmten Bewusstsein ge- kommen." Yet Paul did not create this distinction, "nur hat er bloss fur das Bewusstsein ausgesprochen, was an sich, principieU und tatsach- lich, oder impUcite schon in der Lehre Jesu enthalten war." The same thing was true of the "Petrine" Christians, although they "iiberhaupt noch keine Ahnung davon hatten, welcher Keim eines tiefgehenden Zwiespaltes mit dem Judentum in ihrem Glauben an Christus verborgen lag" {Vorksungen, usw., pp. 128 f.). ' A characteristic defense of this position may be seen in Sorley, Jewish Christians and Judaism (Cambridge, 1881), or Hort, Judaistic Christianity (London, 1894). Hoennicke, Das Judenchristentum int ersten und zweiten Jahrhundert (BerUn, 1908), takes essentially the same position, though beUeving the breach between Paul and the primitive apostles to have been more serious. The Early Christians' Jewish Connections loi church is thought to be much more fundamental than Baur supposed, for the principle of universaUsm, which Baur aUowed to be implicit with the first apostles, is now conceded to Paul only. The gulf separating him from the Jerusalem community is made so wide that he vir tually becomes the founder of the new reUgion on gentile soil. It still has Jewish connections, but these are most immediately with the Judaism of the Diaspora in which Paul had been reared, rather than with the Palestinian milieu in which Jesus and the first disciples lived. The central item of Paul's gospel is found to be his concep tion of universal redemption made possible through the death of Christ. This notion is an expansion of uni- versalistic tendencies already begun by Hellenistic Jews, but in its Christian form it is a distinctly Pauline crea tion. In comparison with the legalistic and nationaUstic ideal of the Jerusalem community, the preaching of the new doctrine is to all intents and purposes the beginning of a new religion.' While it has specific Hellenistic Jewish connections at the outset, they are only peripheral and are easily dismissed by later generations who wish to restate Paul's religion in terms of Greek thinking. Several objections may be urged against this mode of interpretation. To make Paul and his immediate asso ciates the sole founders of gentile Christianity is a doubt ful historical procedure. The New Testament is so ' This view has been most recently advocated by Wrede, Paulus (Tubingen, 1904), EngUsh tr., Paul (Boston, 1908). But the main lines of the representation were already present in the works of Tubingen scholars such as Holsten, Zum Evangelium des Paulus und Petrus (Rostock, 1868) and Das Evangelium des Paulus (Berlin, 1880, 1898'); Pfleiderer, Der PauUnismus (Leipzig, 1890=), English tr., Paulinism (London, i8gi'). This is also one of the crucial points at issue in the much-debated Paul-and-Jesus controversy. I02 The Evolution of Early Christianity deficient in its description of gentile missionary work, except as carried on by Paul and his colaborers, that one all too easily forgets to take account of similar work on the part of those who did not come within the range of Paul's immediate influence, or who did not work under his supervision. While he and his companions were vigorously pushing forward the evangelization of one section of the Graeco-Roman world other laborers were cultivating other fields, and contributing effectively toward the world-expansion of the new religion. We learn from one of Paul's letters that an important church had been established at Rome, and the fame of its faith had become world-wide, without any assistance from Paul.' When Paul was working the territory to the northeast of the Mediterranean the others were carrying the propaganda to the West and probably to the South. Sometimes even in the East Paul was anticipated and helped by laborers from other fields.'' History has not fully recorded the activities of persons who are men tioned in the early part of the Book of Acts, but who drop out of sight as soon as Paul takes the center of the stage. Did their missionary labors cease as suddenly as the story of their career breaks off in Acts ? That is hardly probable. In fact, various hints to the contrary may still be gleaned from the New Testament. Paul speaks of the missionary methods of Barnabas, Peter, and the Lord's brethren as well known to the Christian community in Corinth.' The variety of our New Testa ment Uterature all of which is written in Greek and so is more or less directly a product of gentile Christianity, 'Rom. 1:8-15. ' Acts 18:24 ff.; 19:1; cf. 18:2. 3lCor.9:4-6. The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 103 the widely scattered places in which we find the new religion at the end of the New Testament period, and the slight extent to which so-called Paulme views mani fest themselves in the Christian Uterature of the second century, all go to show that gentile Christianity was not a peculiarly "Pauline" creation. Furthermore, Paul never conceives his work to be the establishment of a new religion as compared with that which he had previously persecuted, and to which he had been converted on the road to Damascus. He may show independence when defending his apostleship, or when advocating the liberties of the gentile converts, but he derives his apostolic credentials from the same source as do his predecessors,' and he does not even claim to have been original in creating the notion of justifica tion by faith. ^ When he preaches the coming of an apocalyptic Messiah in the person of the crucified Jesus, who had been raised from the dead and elevated to a position of dignity in heaven — an item which he unques tionably makes fundamental in his gospel — is he not distinctly "Christian" rather than Pauline, and Chris tian too in the "Jewish" sense? Since Paul emphati cally affirms that there is only one gospel which he and all others share alike, that is, the gospel of faith in this heavenly Messiah, perhaps the legaUstic controversy did not in the long run cut so deep as the later Tubingen scholars have been wont to assume. This brings us to a consideration of eschatology, as demonstrating the close and vital relationship between the early Christians and their Jewish contemporaries. The Jewish expectation of the heavenly Messiah whose ' I Cor. 15 : 8 f.; Gal. 2:8. = Gal. 2 : 14 ff. I04 The Evolution of Early Christianity coming will bring the present evil age to a close and result in the estabUshment of a new order of existence, though only vaguely suggested in the Old Testament, is held to have been a prominent item in the Judaism of Jesus' day. Until within the last half -century very little notice has been taken of this side of Judaism, but of late it has been much emphasized.' When the early Christians preached the coming of the heavenly Messiah who was to bring all evil to an end and set up a new kingdom in righteousness, they were, it is said, not ' A beginning in this direction was made by DiUmann, Das Buch Henoch (Leipzig, 1851), and HUgenfeld, Die jiidische Apokalyptik (Jena, 1857). The study was furthered by Colani, Jesus-Christ etks croyances messianiques de son temps (Strassburg, 1864); Vernes, Histoire des idles messianiques depuis Alexandre jusqu' a I'empereur Hadrian (Paris, 1874). At present this subject has an extensive Uterature deaUng with both Judaism and Christianity. Jewish views are expounded in various treatises on Judaism (see above, p. 79), e.g., Schiirer, Geschichte, usw., II, 609-51, English tr.. History of the Jewish People, II, U, 126-87; Volz, Jiidische Eschatologie von Daniel bis Akiba (Tubingen, 1903); Bousset, Die ReUgion des Judentums, pp. 233 f.; Gressmann, Der Ursprung der israelitisch-jiidischen Eschatologie (Gottingen, 1906) ; Lagrange, Le messia- nisme chez les Juifs (Paris, 1908); Bertholet, Die jiidische ReUgion, pp. 133 ff., 435 ff. A comparative study of Jewish and Christian views is made by Charles, Eschatology, Hebrew, Jewish and Christian (New York, 1899), and Mathews, The Messianic Hope in the New Testament (Chicago, 1905). Recent studies on Jesus and on Paul devote consider able attention to this element in early Christianity, e.g., J. Weiss, Die Predigt Jesu vom Reiche Gottes (Gottingen, 1892, 1900^); Baldensperger, Das Selbstbewusstsein Jesu im Lichte der messianischen Ho£nungen seiner Zeit (Strassburg, 1888, 1892', 3d ed., of first part, Die messianisch- apokalyptischen Hojfnungen des Judentums, 1903); Briickner, Die Entstehung der pauUnischen Christologie (Strassburg, 1903); H. J. Holtz mann, Das messianische Bewusstsein Jesu (Tubingen, 1907); E. F. Scott, The Kingdom and the Messiah (New York, 1911); Schweitzer, Geschichte der pauUnischen Forschung (Tiibingen, 1911) and Geschichte der Lehen- Jesu-Forschung (Tubingen, 1906, 1913=), EngUsh tr.. The Quest of the Historical Jesus (New York, 1910). The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 105 deriving their message simply from Jesus, but were phras ing their estimate of him in the familiar terminology of contemporary Jewish apocalyptic. So far as this phase of doctrine is thought to be central in early Christianity — and it is now so regarded by many interpreters — the new religion proves to have had substantial and imme diate connections with later Judaism. Much can be said in favor of this opinion. The presence of this type of messianic hope in late Judaism is attested both in the first century before and in the first century after the opening of the Christian era.' The extant literary evidence is, to be sure, not so exten sive as one could wish, yet the existence of this type of hope is well attested. Nor is there any uncertainty regarding the strong resemblance between these Jewish expectations and the early Christians' picture of their coming Messiah. Readjustments are made to suit the Christian situation, but still the gospel portrait of the heavenly Son of Man to come on the clouds in glory ,^ the description in Acts of the appointed Messiah whose coming awaits the restoration of all things,' the PauUne Messiah to be revealed in judgment,'' and the reigning Messiah of the Apocalypse, all hark back most distinctly to the apocalyptic conceptions of later Judaism. Quite apart from the much-debated question of Jesus' own idea of his messianic program, it is perfectly clear that his disciples after his death evaluated his personaUty by means of this current Jewish coinage. 'E.g., Enoch, IV Ezra, Baruch, etc.; cf. Schurer, Geschichte, usw.. Ill, 263 ff. For texts see Charles, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha (Oxford, 1913). "Mark 8:37; I3:24ff. 3 Acts 3 : 20 f. "I Cor. i : 8 f.; 4:5, etc. io6 The Evolution of Early Christianity If Paul and his predecessors reared the superstructure of their faith upon a Jewish type of messianic hope re-worded in terms of belief in Jesus' resurrection, exaltation to lordship, and imminent Parousia, and if other Christians besides Paul and his companions were also propagating the same faith in gentile lands, no reasons remain for foUowing the later Tiibingen scholars in finding Christianity's Jewish connections chiefly in the Diaspora. It may be quite true that the new religion was freshly influenced by Judaism in gentile territory, where the gospel was, in the first instance, often proclaimed in connection with the synagogue assemblies, and from which it doubtless drew converts. These persons who had been reared in a Hellenistic atmosphere, retained after their conversion, as would be expected, many religious values which their past experi ence had supplied. But a similar situation existed earlier in Palestine. Certainly Christianity had dis tinctly Jewish features before it became an extra- Palestinian propaganda, and, since many of the earlier missionaries had themselves been Palestinians, Chris tianity even on gentile soil cannot have been very differ ent from that of the primitive community. Changes, of course, took place with the passage of time and the rise of new situations. But so far as Jewish influence is concerned, conditions in the Diaspora were not so very different from those of Palestine as to call for exten sive readjustment in Christianity's Jewish relationships in gentile lands. Much less are we able to believe that gentile Chris tianity was a new creation by Paul. To what extent he was original, or how far he adopted Greek or Graeco- The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 107 Jewish ideas in working out the logic of the redemptive scheme, is another question. Whatever answer one may give to this, the fact remains that Paul and his predecessors shared aUke in this fundamental item of common Christian belief. He and they had identically the same recipe for obtaining salvation: a confession of Jesus' messianic lordship on the basis of a belief that God had raised him from the dead.' Also the consummation of salvation was, both for him and for them, to be accomplished by Jesus' return in judgment. Differences in details ought not to be allowed to obscure these central elements in their common faith. Another school of interpreters finds Christianity's Jewish connections to have been relatively insignificant for the genesis of the new religion, particularly when it became a gentile movement. This independence is not ascribed to the Christians' possession of new christologi cal doctrine, or to their unique religious experience, as some earlier interpreters have often insisted. Nor is this credited to Paul's doctrine of universaUsm, as the later Tubingen scholars affirmed. The new movement is thought to have been independent of Judaism because it had so generaUy taken up from its gentile environ ment Hellenistic features of a non- Jewish character. Even the messianism of the primitive community is thought to have had a comparatively insignificant place under the new conditions. Since the success of Chris tianity outside of Palestine is credited largely to the appropriation of items from the contemporary gentUe world, this view impUes, even if it does not expUcitly ' Rom. 10:9. io8 The Evolution of Early Christianity affirm, that Christianity on gentile soil was only remotely connected with Judaism. Not all representatives of this so-called religions- geschichtliche school hold identically the same opinioris on the question of Christianity's genetic relation to Judaism. Non- Jewish elements are sometimes said to have come in directly through Palestinian connections where syncretistic influences are thought to have been at work even before Christianity arose.' Under these conditions the genetic relation between the two reUgions is really close and vital in so far as Judaism at that time was actually syncretistic. But other adherents of the religionsgeschichtliche school attach much less importance to contemporary Jewish faith, and derive the foreign elements of Christianity from the beUevers' first-hand contact with the Hellenistic world. This procedure results in a separation of gentile Christianity from Pales tinian Christianity similar to that made by Tubingen scholars, although a very different explanation is given for the necessity of the separation. The view in question appears most fully worked out in Bousset's recent volume, Kyrios Christos.^ Accord- ¦ E.g., Gunkel, Zum religionsgeschichtlichen Verstdndnis des Neuen Testaments (Gottingen, 1903, 1910"). " Bousset, Kyrios Christos: Geschichte des Christusglaubens von den Anfdngen des Christentums bis Irenoeus (Gottingen, 1913); cf. also HeitmiiUer, "Zum Problem Paulus und Jesus," Zeitschrift fiir die neukstamentliche Wissenschaft, XIII (1912), 320-37; Bohlig', "Zum Begriff Kyrios bei Paulus," ibid., XIV (1913), 23-37. Reitzenstein, Poimandres and Die hellenistischen Mysterienreligionen; BohUg, Die GeisteskuUur von Tarsos (Gottingen, 1913), and similar studies in con temporary HeUenistic reUgions furnish a basis for this type of interpreta tion. J. Weiss, Das Urchristentum (Gottingen, 1914), though freely employing data suppUed by the religionsgeschichtliche school, is more reserved in breaking Christianity's Jewish connections. The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 109 ing to this interpretation the primitive Christians shared the current eschatological form of the Jewish messianic hope, the distinctive Christian feature being the iden tification of Jesus with the apocalyptic Son of Man. The next stage of development is seen in the early Hellenistic community with its center probably at Antioch in Syria. While it was not without Jewish connections, its most distinctive characteristic was neither Jewish nor primitive Christian in origin, but purely Hellenistic. This distinctive item was reverence for Jesus as Lord (Kiipioj, Kyrios). From being a reUgion of faith in a coming Messiah, Christianity has now become the cult of the present Lord. Thus the Kyrios cult becomes a powerful rival of primitive Chris tian eschatology, and is destined to push it quite com pletely into the background.' Paul represents a further stage in this course of development, he being entirely ' "Der Menschensohn wird so ziemlich vergessen werden und ais eine unverstandene Hieroglyphe in den Evangelien stehen bleiben, dem im Kulte gegenwartigen Kyrios gehort die Zukunft" (Bousset, op. cit., p. 125). J. Weiss states the matter more cautiously and prob ably more accurately: "In dem starken Hervortreten dieses Namens {Kyrios) vor dem Messiastitel kiindigt sich nun auch eine sehr be- merkenswerte sachUche Verschiebung gegeniiber der Urgemeinde an. Mit dem Zuriicktreten des nationalen Moments trat auch das eschatolo gische werm auch. nicht in die zweite Linie, so doch ein wenig aus der vordersten SteUung zuriick. Das Verhaltnis zu dem erhohten Kyrios behielt naturUch seine eschatologische Perspektive; die Parusie Christi bUeb ein ausserst wichtiges Moment, namentlich fiir die aus dem Juden tum gekommenen GemeindegUeder. Aber fiir die Mehrzahl der Heiden- christen war doch hiermit eine neue Gegenwarts-Religion gegeben; damit war ein Gegengewicht gegen die vorwiegend eschatologische Religion der Urgemeinde vorhanden; .... der himmUsche Herr war immer da und bot alles, was man brauchte, schon jetzt in reichster Fiille. So kommt es, dass an SteUe des grossen Weltendramas immer mehr der individueUe Vorgang der Erlosung des Einzelnen in den Vordergrund trat" {Das Urchristentum, I, 128 f.). IIO The Evolution of Early Christianity removed from contact with the Palestinian Christians. It was the Hellenistic community only that he had per secuted, and it was this circle alone which later furnished him all his historical data about Christianity. Thus the new religion for Paul was, from the first, the worship of a present Lord — a Kyrios cult — rather than a Judaeo- Christian beUef in an eschatological Messiah. In post- Pauline times Christianity's Jewish connections grew still more remote and of less vital significance for the existence of the new religion. In how far is this type of interpretation vaUd ? While it may have been a perfectly normal thing for Chris tians in a gentile atmosphere to phrase their religion in the language and spirit of the gentile world, it is stiU a question whether advocates of the new faith, like Paul and his Hellenistic Jewish predecessors, did so soon break with their past religious heritage. That Paul was a product of gentile Christianity is perhaps nearer to the truth than was the Tubingen view that he was its creator. At least he and his immediate associates were neither the first nor the only missionaries in gentile lands, but that gentile Christianity before Paul and Paul himself were so remotely related to the Chris tianity of Palestine as Bousset affirms, and hence so far removed from Judaism, is more doubtful. This opinion is open to one of the chief objections urged against the Tubingen view, namely, it passes too lightly over the eschatological features in Paul's letters. It was perhaps only natural, in view of Schweitzer's recent one sided use of eschatology to explain everything in Paul,' ' Cf. his Geschichte der pauUnischen Forschung (Tubingen, 191 1), EngUsh tr., Paul and His Interpreters (London, 1912). The Early Christians' Jewish Connections iii that the pendulum should swing to the opposite ex treme, but in avoiding the ScyUa of Schweitzer has not Bousset become involved in the perils of Charyhdis? Whatever else Paul may have included within the hori zon of his religious world, he certainly did retain and make prominent a Christianized form of the Jewish apocalyptic hope. He admonished the Thessalonians to prepare for the end of the world, which was coming suddenly as a thief in the night.' The Corinthians are exhorted to suspend judgment upon their fellows since they are all alike waiting for the revelation of Jesus when every man's work will be tested by the fire of the final judgment day. The interim is so short that marriage is discouraged, and those who are questioning regarding the resurrection of the dead are told of the Parousia of Christ when he is to conquer death and complete the work of restoration by giving over the newly established kingdom to the Father.^ The Romans are warned that the night is far spent and the day at hand when all shall stand before God's judgment seat, and the Philippians are encouraged to go on to perfection until the day of Jesus Christ, confident that the Lord is at hand.^ Paul endures his present afflictions as a missionary the more cheerfully because of the prospect of reward in this coming day of judgment. The Thessalonians are to be his joy and crown of glorying "before our Lord Jesus at his coining"; and his sufferings on behalf of the Gen tiles, being "a sweet savor unto God," he gladly bears as "light afflictions" in comparison with the "eternal ' I Thess. I : lo; 3:13; 4:15-18; 5:2,23. ^I Cor. 1:7 f.; 3:13; 4:5; 15:235.; 16:22; II Cor. 5:10. 3 Rom. 13:12; 14:10; Phil. 1:6, 10; 4:5. 112 The Evolution of Early Christianity weight of glory" which is to be his when he stands in the judgment and there presents the fruit of his mission ary labors.' On the whole would it not be more truly descriptive of Paul's .attitude to caU his religion a "Christ" (Mes siah) cult rather than a "Lord" {Kyrios) cult? It is very true that Paul makes much of Jesus' lordship over the community. Christians are those who "caU upon the name of the Lord"; to be saved one must "confess with the mouth that Jesus is Lord," and "the Lord is the Spirit," whose presence in the believer is the very cornerstone of the Christian life. Yet in aU this there is no disposition on Paul's part to minimize Jesus' function. as Messiah, or to discount the supreme sig nificance of that moment in history when Jesus will appear in messianic splendor bringing the present evil age to an end, estabUshing an eternal kingdom in right eousness, and at last handing over to God the perfected product of his messianic work. At best the present lordship of Jesus over the community is only a make shift, a temporary expedient to bridge over the time until the day of judgment breaks, manifesting the ulti mate triumph of Jesus as Messiah and estabUshing the dominion of God forevermore. Furthermore, for Paul "Lord" is only a title for Jesus, while "Christ," though originally a title, has come to be practically a proper name co-ordinate with the name Jesus, consequently "Christ" identffies the indi vidual himself and does not merely describe one of his attributes. Therefore it is not surprising that Paul ¦I Thess. 2:19 f.; I Cor. 9:23-27; 15:31; II Cor. 2:14 ff.; 4:14-17; Rom. 8:17; Phil. 2:16. The Early Christians' Jewish Connections 113 uses this term more frequently than "Lord."' Also in the rites of the cult, "Lord" does not predominate over the term "Christ," although Bousset seems to assume that it does. In speaking of baptism, for instance, he says that in the Pauline age this rite was performed in the name of "the Lord Jesus," the name and the Spirit being "the effective factors in the sacrament.^ But if we state the matter in Paul's language it is Christ rather than Lord which is most frequently associated with the baptismal rite. When writing to the Galatians he insists upon the adequacy of the religion of faith in "Christ Jesus," reminding his readers that all who have been "baptized into Christ have put on Christ" and so are all one "in Christ Jesus."^ They now have member ship in the "Christ Jesus" religion, which is superior to all rivals. Speaking of the labels by which the differ ent parties in Corinth have designated themselves, Paul asks the schismatics, "Is the Christ divided?" Has ' Including Colossians and Ephesians, but not the Pastorals, the figures for Pauline usage are approximately as foUows: '^piarbs alone, 206 times (77 times with the article); 'S.pi.iTTbs 'Irjo-oOs, 56 times; 'Iijff-oCs Xpi .... ^/triv Si &yvooip£voi) ; cf . also J. Weiss, Das Urchristentum, I, 136, n. i. ¦•Rom. 15:26-28. I20 The Evolution of Early Christianity not received his commission from the Jerusalem apostles, he had received no new commission in comparison with theirs, and although the first period of his Christian career had been spent in Damascus and Arabia, he reckoned his evangelizing activity territorially as beginning at Jerusalem.' So in general the New Testament writers beUeved that their religion, although it possessed new and truer items, had a substantial foundation in Judaism. It was also a unit in itself, notwithstanding the diversities of Christian activity in scattered fields. While the New Testament is so largely a gentile Christian book, it uniformly attests the consciousness of a close genetic kinship with Judaism. When the Gospels were written the Old Testament was used as a source book for mes sianic prophecy and for Christian instruction generaUy. John the Baptist and Jesus were represented as working almost exclusively in a Jewish setting, the first disciples were beUeved to have been closely attached to Judaism, the new propaganda was said to have been carried on frequently in connection with the synagogue. Paul himself not only thought Judaism the true ancestor of the new religion, but looked for the speedy reconcilia tion of these two estranged kinsmen. The author of Matthew, in spite of his anti- Jewish polemic, emphati cally affirmed both Jesus' loyalty to the law and the permanent character of that institution.^ The third evangeUst, in proving to Theophilus the validity of the new faith, closely associated its origin and early history with Jerusalem.' And so anti- Jewish a writer as John 'Rom. 15:19. "5:17-19. 3Cf. Acts i:8ff.; 2:iff.; 8:i4ff.; 9:26-30. The Early Christians' Jeivish Connections 121 approvingly reported Jesus to have said that "salvation is of the Jews.'" The early Christians and their Jewish kinsmen certainly had much in common religiously. This com mon possession was not merely a legacy from the Old Testament, it was also a heritage from the religious life of later times. Nor did it consist primarily in the adoption of ideas and customs which were essentially foreign to the real nature of the new religion, with the consequence that these things had to be dismissed before the new movement could realize its universal destiny. On the contrary, it carried its rich Jewish heritage to the Gentiles and, though extensive transformations took place in the course of time. Christians continued to feel that their religion had a substantial Jewish background. In this feeling they were unquestionably correct. Yet we cannot set apart a definite quantum of early Christian doctrine or ritual, labeUng it "Jewish" in contrast with other items which are distinctively "Christian"; nor can we restrict the Christian's debt to Judaism within one particular sphere. This is because the relationship between the two reUgions was one of life and so was subject to much variation. The connections were as numerous and varied as were the individuals in whose career these relations actually existed and found expression. The reUgious lives of different persons amid different surroundings and with different types of experience aU went into the making of the new reUgion's history. Some persons had ab sorbed into the fiber of their religious life one type of Jewish influence and some another, according to ' 4:22. 122 The Evolution of Early Christianity individual tastes and circumstances. Other members of the new community had received their training from earliest childhood within Jewish circles, and so owed that ancient faith a much larger debt than they could possibly realize. A similar situation was true of those who had been proselytes to Judaism before adopting Christianity. Of others, who came under Jewish influ ence only indirectly through contact with Christian converts from Judaism, or through the use of Jewish books within the new community, the heritage from the Jews was doubtless less extensive but no less real. As these varied relationships were a matter of actual Ufe, Christianity's Jewish connections in New Testament times must be admitted to have been vital in character as well as wide and varied in extent. CHAPTER V THE BREACH BETWEEN CHRISTIANS AND JEWS The relation between the first Christians and their Jewish kinsmen was so close, and the two had so much in common, that the rapid development of bitter hos tility between them demands detailed explanation. The Jews seem to have taken the initiative in forcing separation. The early group of disciples described in the Book of Acts apparently had no thought of severing traditional reUgious connections, or of estabUshing any movement outside the pale of Judaism. Is this repre sentation of Acts historical ? It is true that the writer was desirous of assuring Theophilus that the new religion had the full authority of antiquity, therefore primitive Christianity was given the best of Jewish credentials and was allowed to become a gentile propa ganda only after Jews had consistently rejected the gospel. From this representation one might infer that Acts had overrated the attachment to Judaism. Yet this accusation would hold only for the formal side of the relationship, since the author was himself convinced that the new faith by its very nature was destined from the beginning to become universal and so to be inde pendent of the old. This led him to make the connec tion between the two formal rather than essential. The characters who work out this historical transition often move upon the stage like figures performing mechani cally, and arriving at a result which surprises no one because the outcome had been fully anticipated. Hence 123 124 The Evolution of Early Christianity the intrinsic possibiUty that the relation to Judaism, though less official and formal, was in reaUty more genuine and natural than Acts represents. Furthermore, Paul's account of the situation in • which his liberalism was a stumbling-block to many Palestinian Christians also suggests that their attitude was a conservative one. They observed diligently the customary reUgious conventions and were so true to the ancestral faith that the thought of carrying the gospel of the Messiah into Samaria, or into gentile territory, dawned upon them only gradually, and the legitimacy of the procedure was admitted only hesitatingly. Loy alty to the reUgion of their fathers is one of the best- attested characteristics of the first Christians. The message they preached was intended by them primarily if not exclusively for Israelites, and its fuffihnent was to be the perfect reaUzation of Israel's long-deferred hope. Thus they had no desire to break with Judaism, and did not even think of themselves as a separate sect. They were the true Judaism, bringing to every IsraeUte the message of the coming Messiah. Their hopes were doomed to disappointment. Their kinsmen so generally refused to agree with them, and indeed so vigorously opposed them, that they were early forced into a position of isolation. It cannot have been long before vigorous measures were taken to sup press their activity. The Book of Acts gives no explicit information about the date of the early persecution, but it was in full swing when Paul's conversion took place, perhaps only a year, or at most within three years, after Jesus' crucifixion. Nor did opposition cease with Paul. On the contrary, he himself now became the object of The Breach between Christians and Jews 125 persecution directed against the new propaganda on both gentile and Palestinian soil.' Too much must not be inferred from the ideaUstic statement of Acts 9:31 to the effect that the church throughout all Judaea and GaUlee and Samaria had peace after Paul's hand was stayed. While the narrative is henceforth inter-* ested mainly in the opposition encountered by Paul, there are still some indications that even in Judaea the Christian situation continued to be precarious. On one occasion James, the brother of John, was put to death and Peter barely escaped a similar fate.^ Accord ing to one tradition, accepted as authentic by several scholars, John also suffered martyrdom at this time.' When Peter removed from Jerusalem, James seems to have become the chief personage in the mother-church. A definite date for this event cannot be fixed. Eusebius reports Clement of Alexandria to have said that Peter, James, and John were not covetous for honor and so chose James for the head of the community after Jesus' ascension.'' It is possible, perhaps probable, that Herod's persecution (44 a.d.) resulted in Peter's leaving Jerusalem, so that James henceforth was looked upon ' Cf. IThess. 2:14 f.; II Cor. 11:24, 32 f.; ActS9:23,29. "Acts, chap. 12. 3 See de Boor, "Neue Fragmente des Papias," Texte und Untersuch- ungen, V, 2 (Leipzig, 1888), pp, 167 ff.; Badham, "The Martyrdom of St. John," American Journal of Theology, III (1899), 729-40, VIII (1904), 539-54; Schwartz, "Ueber den Tod der Sohne Zebedaei," Abhandlungen der konigUchen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu G'ottin- gen, Neue Folge, VII, No. 5 (Berlin, 1904); Bousset, Die OJenbarung Johannis (Gottingen, 1906), pp. 34-49; Moffatt, Introduction to the Literature of the New Testament (New York, 1911), pp. 601 ff., where other Uterature is cited. ^HE,U, I. 126 The Evolution of Early Christianity as leader of the community.' Clement of Alexandria preserves a fragment in which Peter says that the apostles had been instructed to preach to Israel twelve years, after which time they were to go forth to the world.^ This may have been about the length of time spent by the apostles in their most strenuous activities to evangelize their own countrymen, an effort yielding such meager results that they now sought members for the new messianic kingdom in other lands. Accord ing to Josephus, James, the Lord's brother, also feU a victim to Jewish hatred in the year 62 when the Saddu cean high priest Ananus had him stoned along with others for breaking the law.' This is a very strange charge to bring against James who elsewhere in tradi tion figures as a staunch supporter of the law.'' Josephus says that the fairer-minded Jews, probably meaning Pharisees, protested against Ananus' conduct, but Hegesippus makes the scribes and Pharisees directly responsible for James's death.^ Certainty on this point is not now attainable; we can only say that James met death at the hands of the Jews. Finally, the withdrawal of the Jerusalem Christians to Pella during the war against Rome (66-70 a.d.)* severed forever any Ungering bonds of sympathy between the two faiths and showed how completely even the most Jewish Christians had lost their concern for the nation's preservation. This 'Acts 12:17; 15:13; 21:18; Gal. 1:19; 2:9. " Strom., VI, 5, 43. 3 Ant., XX, ix, i. ¦iCf. Gal. 2:9; Acts 15:13. 3 According to Eusebius, HE, II, 23. « Eusebius, HE, III, v. 2 f.; Epiphanius, Haer., XXIX, 7 (Migne, XLI, col. 401), and De mensuris et potideribus, 15 (Migne, XLIII, col. 261). The Breach hetween Christians and Jews 127 rapid sketch makes it clear that Jewish opposition to Christianity had been constant, though varying in intensity at different periods, from an early date both in Palestine and in the Diaspora. What was the ground of this opposition? There is nothing to indicate that it was a continuation of that conflict between Jesus and the Pharisees which is so prominent in the Gospels. The disciples were not opposed because they had been followers of the Cruci fied One; they incurred hostility on account of their own estatic, pneumatic, dynamic conduct. The details given in the early chapters of Acts may, it is true, be somewhat idealized under the influence of subsequent interpretation. Since this book, like the former treatise by the same author, was doubtless composed for the purpose of strengthening Theophilus' faith,' and since the author's own faith was surely strong enough to surmount many difficulties which a lack of first-hand information might occasion, it becomes necessary in a strictly historical inquiry to deal critically with his narrative. He certainly employed genuine historical tradition when it was available, and he not improbably used oral or even documentary source materials in the composition of the Acts as he did in the writing of his Gospel.^ But the discovery of these sources by a pro cess of literary analysis, though never so successful, does not supply the ultimate criterion of historical 'Luke 1:3 f.; Actsi:i. " Luke 1 : 1-3. One of the most recent and most successful attempts at analysis is Harnack's Die Apostelgeschichte (Leipzig, 1908), English tr.. The Acts of the Apostles (New York, 1909). For a survey of the literature see Moffatt, Introduction to the Literature ofthe New Testament, pp. 268 ff. 128 The Evolution of Early Christianity accuracy. " This must be sought in a critical estimate based upon internal indicia, tested on the one hand by comparison with the Jewish background of the early community, and on the other by data from Paul's letters. Notwithstanding these difficulties, it is still possible to determine the chief factors in the situation which brought about the early Christians' separation from Judaism. There are various indications to show that it was in the first instance their own pneumatic activity which gave offense to the Jews. The new movement had begun in ecstasy. Paul expUcitly affirms that his new faith, as well as that of his predecessors, rested upon a vision- experience of the risen Jesus. These ecstatic phenomena had occurred in the case of Cephas, of the Twelve, of a company of approximately five hundred persons, of James, of all of the apostles, and finaUy of Paul himself.' Henceforth they identified the heavenly Jesus with the expected heavenly Messiah of Jewish apocalyptic. The notion of a unique spiritual endow ment was naturally associated with this new faith in the risen Jesus. The Messiah himself in Jewish thinking was to possess a special pneumatic equipment.'' Isaiah's description of the messianic king upon whom the spirit of Yahweh was to rest, "the spirit of wisdom and under standing, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of 'ICor. 15:5 ff. " See Bousset, Die Religion des Judentums, pp. 452-58, and Volz, Der Geist Gottes (Tiibingen, 1910), pp. 87 ff. For the prominent place which the idea of the Spirit occupied first in Jewish reUgion and then in Christianity, see further Gunkel, Die Wirkungen des heiligen Geistes (Gottingen, 1888, 1908"); Weinel, Die Wirkungen des Geistes und der Geister (Freiburg, 1899); Wood, The Spirit of God in Biblical Literature (New York, 1904). The Breach between Christians and Jews 129 knowledge and of the fear of Yahweh,'" had been freely applied by later Jewish writers to the apocalyptic Messiah. Thus in En. 62:2 the elect one is seen seated upon the throne of glory of the Lord of spirits and the spirit of righteousness is poured out over him.^ His subjects were also to share in this pneumatic equipment, either by way of preparation for his coming or else as part of their inheritance in the messianic blessing. Joel recounts among the special acts to be performed by God before the day of judgment an out pouring of the Spirit upon all flesh, so that the sons and daughters of Israel should prophesy, their old men should dream dreams, and their young men should see visions.' In the Testament of Judah, section 24, it is said that the heavens will open over the Messiah, pouring down upon him the blessings of the Spirit from the Holy Father, and the Messiah himself will pour out the spirit of his grace upon his subjects who will become truly his sons. 'Isa. 11:2; cf. 42:1; 61: iff. Christian tradition made extensive use of this notion in defending its doctrine of Jesus' messiahship while on earth (see Mark i:ii and paraUels; John 1:33; Luke 1:80; Acts 10:38; Gospel according to Hebrews; Jerome, Com. Isa. 11:2). "See further En. 49:1-4; Pss. Sol. 17:42; 18:8; Test. Levi, 18. 3 Joel 2:28ff.; cf. Zech. 12:10. The prophet Joel seems to make these phenomena merely premonitory signs of the coming of the messianic age, but the author of Acts, according to the usual inter pretation, uses the prophecy to describe the character of the messianic community itself. While such freedom in use of Scripture was char acteristic of that period, it may be that the early Christians were in reaUty stiU looking to the future for the true messianic age, consequently the charismata were for them a fulfilment of the prophecy in its original sense. As later Christian thinkers gradually changed the messianic emphasis from the future to the Ufetime of Jesus, they came to treat charismata as less anticipatory and more as an actual reaUzation of the messianic blessings. 130 The Evolution of Early Christianity Similarly the Zadokite sectaries believed the Anointed One mediated a knowledge of the Holy Spirit.' The ecstatic experiences which established faith in Jesus' resurrection and exaltation to messianic dignity, the current idea of the Messiah's own unique spiritual endowment, and the expectation of an unusual demon stration of charismatic activity among men, either as an anticipation of the end or as a participation in messianic blessings, lead us to expect that the first disciples would assign a large place to the activities of the Spirit in their new life. The probabiUty of this supposition is further con firmed by the central position which is given to the Spirit in Christianity as expounded by the New Testa ment writers. This power is active in connection with the birth and childhood of both John the Baptist and Jesus.^ Jesus is initiated into the work of his pubhc ministry by a special spiritual endowment at baptism;' his conduct is sometimes determined by the dictates of the Spirit;'' his numerous encounters with demons demonstrate that the Holy Spirit, which took up its abode in him at baptism, is superior in power to Satan, the prince of evil spirits, and his demonic representatives upon earth ;5 and blasphemy against the Holy Spirit as its power is manifest in the work of Jesus is the one unforgivable sin.* ' Schechter's edition, Text A, II, 13. " Mark i : 18, 20; Luke i : 15, 35, 41, 67, 80; 2 : 25 f . 3 Matt. 3:i6f.; Mark i:iof.; Luke 3:21 f.; John 1:33a; Acts 10:38. ¦• Matt. 4:1; Mark 1:12; Luke4:i, 14; cf. John 3:34. 3 Matt. 12:25 ff.; Mark3:23ft'.; Lukeii:i7ff. 'Matt. 12:32; Mark 3:29; Luke 12:10. The Breach between Christians and Jews 131 Christians themselves are similarly endowed for carrying on the work begun by Jesus. At the beginning of his career it is affirmed that he will baptize his fol lowers with the Spirit,' a promise fulfilled according to the Fourth Gospel on the day of his resurrection, but at Pentecost according to Acts.^ Henceforth believers' lives constantly display the workings of the Spirit; in fact, the Book of Acts might be called a history of the activities of the Holy Ghost.' Throughout Paul's epistles the indwelling of the Spirit is the ground and inspiration of the entire Christian life.'' Indeed it might be said that Christianity as described by the various New Testament writers is in general a religion of the Holy Spirit. This entire situation prepares us to beUeve that Christicins from the first were pre eminently pneumatic individuals. When and how did the first believers receive their special spiritual equipment? It is a noteworthy fact that the New Testament offers no one stereotyped formula for obtaining this endowment. Jesus himself received it immediately after baptism,^ and John the Baptist declared that Jesus would administer a baptism of the Holy Spirit to his disciples.* In Acts this promise was fuffiUed in a miraculous demonstration at Pentecost, 'Matt. 3:11; Mark 1:8; Luke 3:16; John 1:336; Acts 11:16. "John 20:22; Acts 2:1 ff. 3 E.g., 1:2, 5, 8; 2:1 ff.; 4:8,31; 5:3.32; 6:3,5,10; 7:51,55; 8:15 ff., 29, 39; 9:17,31; 10:44-47; 11:15-17,24,28; 13:2,4,9,52; 15:8,28; 16:6 f.; 19:2,6; 20:23,28; 21:4,11; 28:25. 4 To cite only a few representative passages, Rom. 8:1-17; I Cor. 2:10-16; 14:1 ff.; II Cor. 3:17 f.; Gal. 3:2-5. s Matt. 3:16; Mark 1:10; Luke 3: 22; John 1:33a. 'Matt. 3:11; Mark 1:8; Luke 3:16; John 1:336; Acts 11:16. 132 The Evolution of Early Christianity while in the Gospel of John Jesus exhaled the Spirit upon his followers on the evening of the day he rose from the dead.' Of later converts, some became pneu matic on hearing the preaching of the gospel;^ others received the gift as Jesus did in connection with baptism;' on other occasions the desired endowment was obtained by the laying on of hands." To determine from this complicated situation how the early believers obtained their first consciousness of spiritual equipment is not an easy task. Apparently Paul connected his unique pneumatic endowment most immediately with his conversion experi ence. Although he subsequently had frequent visions and revelations, his ecstatic experience on the road to Damascus was the one outstanding event in his Ufe which marked the beginning of his career as a spiritual individual.^ Those who became Christians in response to Paul's preaching passed through a similar experience, if we may take the Galatian situation to be typical. The apostle exhibited before the eye of his audience Jesus crucified,* and as his hearers exercised faith in the redeeming work of the Messiah as portrayed by Paul, they received the charismatic endowment which enabled them to work "miracles." Paul does not say that the spiritual equipment of the new convert was fully attained at this particular moment; in fact, he frequently intimates that the new life was to be cultivated and increased by various means, but conversion was the ' 20:22. " Gal. 3:2; I Thess. 1:6; Acts 10:44-48; 11:15. 3ActS2:38; cf. I Cor. 12: 13. sGal. i:i5f.; 2:20. "Acts 8:14-17; 9:17; 19:2 ff. 'Gal. 3:1-5; cf. ICor. 2:2. The Breach between Christians and Jews 133 initial stage in the Christian's career as a pneumatic person. It is conceivable that the first disciples also associated the beginnings of their pneumatic Ufe with those ecstatic experiences in which they had seen the risen Jesus. There were significant Jewish precedents for positing an activity of the Spirit in connection with vision and ecstasy. The ecstatic activity of King Saul was ascribed to the presence of the Spirit of God, and the same cause produced a similar phenomenon in the case of messengers whom Saul sent to arrest David.' But the most striking Old Testament illustration is to be found in Ezekiel. His prophetic career opened with a wonderful vision of the heavenly glory of God. When he fell face down ward upon the ground God spoke to him out of heaven and the Spirit straightway entered into him, setting him upon his feet. Henceforth his whole life was per vaded by demonstrations of a pneumatic character. The Spirit repeatedly "entered into" hun or "fell upon" him, commanding him to speak or transporting him from place to place.^ When the first Christians saw Jesus in his resurrection glory, the feeUng of assur ance and elation which took possession of them at that 'ISam. 10:10; 19:20-24. "See, e.g., 2:2 ff.; 3:12,24; 8:3ff.; 11:1,5,24. Christian tradition made extensive use of these ideas: cf. the bright Ught and the voice in connection with Paul's conversion (Acts 9:3 ff; 22:6 ff.; 26:i2ff.; cf. Ezek. 1:28; 2 : 1 ff .) ; the opening of heaven above Jesus at baptism, the descent of the Spirit, the voice, and the subsequent impulsion of the Spirit (Mark 1:10 ff. and parallels; cf. Ezek. 1:1; 2:2ff.; 3:12-24); the career of the evangeUst PhiUp (Acts 8 : 29, 39 f .) ; or Jesus' statement in the Gospel according to the Hebrews: "My mother, the Holy Spirit, took me by one of the hairs of my head and carried me off to Mount Tabor" (cf. Ezek. 8:3). 134 The Evolution of Early Christianity time would most surely have been interpreted in terms of pneumatic endowment, if, indeed, the Spirit was not credited with making the vision possible. This for a Jew would be the natural way to explain such experiences. In the opening chapters of Acts the pneumatic endow ment of the disciples is depicted in a most formal manner. The company of believers assemble in the upper room where they perfect the organization and wait for Pente cost when the new movement is to be equipped by the promised outpouring of the Holy Spirit, and is thereby to be started officially on its world-conquering career. This is the formal beginning of the new reUgion, and the event quite appropriately takes place on the very day which commemorated the giving of the law, the birth day of the old religion which the new is intended to supplant. Just when Pentecost came to be celebrated in this special way is not perfectly clear,' but the author ' For a similar comparison between Christianity and Judaism see Gal. 4:29 f.; Heb. 2:2-4; 12:18-24. According to Benzinger, article "Pentecost" in the Encyclopedia Biblica, III (New York, 1902), it was not until after the faU of Jerusalem that the Feast of Pentecost was observed as a commemoration of the giving of the law. The reason for this opinion is the silence of Philo and Josephus. The writer of the article "Pentecost" in the Jewish Encyclopedia, IX (New York, 1905), says: "The traditional festival of Pentecost as the birthday of the Torah, when Israel became a constitutional body and a distinguished people, remained the sole celebration after the exile'' (p. 593). This interpretation of the giving of the law seems to have been current in Philo's day, whether or not it was connected with Pentecost. He pro tests against its crassness, but does not deny the miracle. God did not utter a voice, " for he is not like a man in need of a mouth and of a tongue and of a windpipe, but as it seems to me he at that time wrought a most conspicuous ahd evidently holy miracle, commanding an invisible sound to be created in the air, more marvelous than aU the instruments that ever existed. , . . '. A rational soul filled with clearness and distinct- ness, which fashioned the air and stretched it out and changed' it into a The Breach between Christians and Jews 135 of Acts, or his source, was certainly acquainted with this custom and used it in his interpretation of Chris tianity's origin. The forty days of waiting by the dis ciples are the same as Moses' period of preparation in Sinai;' the thunder and Ughtning, with the voice of God coming from the midst of the fire, correspond to the roaring sound and tongues of flame in Acts;^ and the proclamation of the gospel in different languages repeats the midrastic representation of the manner in which the law was promulgated from Sinai, when seventy voices proclaimed it to as many different peoples, but -all save Israel rejected. This typt of interpretation was per fectly natural to Christians after they had attained their consciousness of independent soUdarity and had begun to make their propaganda a world missionary movement. Even if the details in Acts are somewhat idealized, as seems most probable, this first Pentecost after Jesus' death may still have been unusually significant for the disciples. It probably was the occasion of their return to Jerusalem, if, as many interpreters think, they had fled when Jesus was put to death. Possibly they needed no incentive for returning other than a desire to observe kind of flaming fire, and so sounded forth so loud and articulate a voice Uke a breath passing through a trumpet, so that those who were at a great distance appeared to hear equally with those who were near to it" {De decalogo, g) . Again, "A voice sounded forth from out of the midst of the fire, which had flowed from heaven, a most marvelous and awful voice, the flame being endowed with articulate speech in a language familiar to the hearers, which expressed its words with- such clearness and distinctness that the people seemed rather to be seeing than hearing it" {ibid., 11). ' Exod. 24: 18. "Exod. 20:18 ff.; Deut. 5:4 f.; 33:2 f.; Ps.68:8. , 136 TJte Evolution of Early Christianity the feast,' but those who had already come to beUeve in Jesus' resurrection and messiahship may have been expecting some unusual demonstration on his part at this time. Their hope of his speedy coming in glory will, at the latest, have begun to take shape the moment their faith in Jesus' resurrection and exaltation became established. Pentecost was an occasion which might easily have stimulated this hope. In general, a feast season brought together a large company and was a time of renewed expectation when messianic pretenders easily took advantage of the excitability of the multi tude. This feast doubtless was remembered as the time when the Jews, after the death of Herod the Great, had made one of their most vigorous protests against the Roman authority, and when the people zealously gave their lives in the cause of liberty.^ The desire for free dom was so deep-rooted in their faith that various leaders successfully assumed for a time the role of deliverer. The large attendance at Pentecost would bring together ' According to the Fourth Gospel, the Last Supper was not the observance of Passover, but was an ordinary meal on the previous even- mg. The events of the next day prevented the disciples from keeping the Passover, hence they raight return a month later to observe this feast as prescribed by Num. 9:9-11. Others insist that the disciples lingered expectantly in the vicinity of Jerusalem and did not witness the appearances of the risen Jesus first in Galilee. So Frey, Der Schluss des Marcus Evangeliums und die Erscheinungen des Auferstandenen (Leipzig, 1913) ; cf. also J. Weiss, Das Urchristentum, I, 9 ff. " Josephus, /4«/., XVII, 10; War, 11, 3 L In addition to the notion that Pentecost marked the beginning of Israel's career as a separate people, according to Jubilees various other significant events occurred on that date, e.g., the covenant with Noah regarding eating blood, the covenant between Jacob and Laban, and renewal of the blood covenant with Abraham and Moses. It was a fitting season for the estabUshment of a new order of things. The Breach between Christians and Jews 137 former foUowers of Jesus, who thus renewed their acquaintanceship. Those who had come to believe in his resurrection and exaltation found here a favorable opportunity for the propagation of their new faith. Now that Jesus had been elevated to a position of author ity in the realm of spirits earthly messianic aspirants could no longer appeal to his followers. They looked for an other-worldly demonstration of divine power, a real sign from heaven to effect the deUverance of Israel. Pentecost with all its pecuUar associations might very easily stimulate their expectations, and mark some fresh experiences in their ecstatic life. Preaching was naturally one of the earliest forms of activity undertaken by the reassembled beUevers. Their consciousness of spiritual equipment easily suggested the work of the prophetic preacher. In the Old Testa ment Moses was credited with expressing a wish that all Yahweh's people, like Eldad and Medad,' might become prophets through receiving the Spirit. The exercise of this gift by the seventy elders, as well as by the bands of prophets with which Saul was connected,^ was probably a display of ecstasy not essentially different from speaking with tongues described by Paul in the fourteenth chapter of I Corinthians. Similar phenom ena in the life of the new community would be only a natural outcome of their Jewish inheritance interpreted in the Ught of their recent experiences. But the great prophets of Israel, in addition to being ecstatics, had uttered a divine message of warning or of consola tion in different crises of history. They proclaimed so vigorously the advent of the days of visitation and 'Num. 11:29. "ISam. 10:5 ff. 138 The Evolution of Early Christianity recompense against Israel that one might say "the prophet is a fool, the man that hath the spirit is mad, for the abundance of thine iniquity.'" And again, "The Spirit of the Lord Yahweh is upon me, because Yahweh hath anointed me to preach good tidings to the meek, he hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening [of the prison] to them that are bound, to proclaim the year of Yahweh's favor and the day of vengeance of our God."^ These and many similar passages in their Scriptures furnish Christians ample guidance for the prophetic interpreta tion of their mission as believers in the risen and exalted Jesus. The office of "prophet," Uke that of "apostle," had become an established institution in Paul's day. AbiUty to prophesy was specifically a "spiritual" gift,' but in contrast with tongues, prophecy was an intelligible utter ance tending toward the edification, exhortation, and consolation of beUevers, while for the unlearned and unbelieving it was intended to produce a conviction of sin, a fear of judgment, and worshipful recognition of God's presence with Christians.'' Paul gives no inti mation that this work of the prophet was a new thing on gentile soil. In fact, the spiritually endowed man of God, calling sinners to repentance, exhorting back sUders to renew their allegiance to the Deity, comfort ing the faithful, and announcing the future program of the Almighty, was a characteristically Jewish figure from the time of the ancient prophets to the days of John the Baptist and Jesus. 'Hos. 9:7. 3 1 Cor. 12:10, 28. * Isa. 61 : 1 f. ; cf. Luke 4: 16 ff. < I Cor., chap. 14. The Breach between Christians and Jews 139 It is quite true that Judaism in post-exiUc times became largely a book religion and so gave less promi nence than formerly to the prophet; still the Jewish people were constantly involved in embarrassing political circumstances which called forth champions of righteous ness, Uberty, and hope, who did a work very similar in spirit to that of the earUer prophets. In taking up this same duty the leaders of the primitive Christian community found in their new pneumatic equipment and in their belief that Jesus had triumphed over death an additional incentive for assuming the prophetic role. Now they were better quaUfied than any of their predecessors had been to disclose the details of the com ing deUverance. The risen Jesus of their faith supplied the needed center about which a new interpretation of the messianic hope could revolve. The preaching activity of the first Christians was probably the initial cause of Jewish opposition, yet the new movement as a whole may at first have seemed quite harmless. The private life of Christians, even on its ecstatic side, is not likely to have occasioned offense, nor would public preaching necessarily involve opposi tion. Freedom in the expression of opinion was not only characteristic of synagogue life, but the appearance of various teachers and preachers, especiaUy at feast seasons, was a phenomenon to which the Jews by this time had become well accustomed. Neither would a type of teaching which concerned itself with the national hope, offering a brighter prospect and demanding as its con dition renewed devotion to God, necessarily be offensive. Even the prediction of the imminent kingdom to be ushered in by divine intervention must have been an I40 The Evolution of Early Christianity acceptable notion to large numbers of Jews. These gen eral characteristics of the Christian movement were too closely in line with much that was characteristic of Juda ism at this time to occasion any serious break between the first disciples and their immediate religious environment. The ground of separation must be sought in other and more distinctive characteristics of the disciples' Ufe. In general, preaching of Jesus' messiahship with the consequent implications for conduct and doctrine was the chief occasion of Jewish hostiUty. This phase of Christian teaching assumed different aspects. Just how much blame was placed upon the Jews for the death of Jesus is not clear from our sources of information, but at the outset probably not a great deal. The dis ciples at first are not likely to have approached their hearers with those severe upbraidings of later times when the situation had been aggravated by a persistent rejec tion of belief in the messiahship of the risen Jesus as well as by the bitter persecution of those who defended this faith. Then the crime of the Jews, and the conse quent doom awaiting them as punishment were por trayed in vivid colors. But in earUer times Jesus' death seems to have been viewed more as the result of misunderstanding than as a crime. In Paul's day, when the relationship between the two movements had become very strained, the Jews' hos tility to Jesus was one of the many performances done "to fill up their sins always,'" yet they wiU hardly have been wiser, in Paul's thought, than the evil angelic powers who were ultimately responsible for the event, yet who did it in ignorance.^ Furthermore, the wrong, ' I Thess. 2 : 15 f. "I Cor. 2 : 6-8. The Breach between Christians and Jews 141 great as it was, could be righted, and Paul was still hopeful that it would be when his kinsmen who had a zeal for God, but not according to knowledge, should accept Jesus as the coming Messiah.' Earlier believers will naturally have judged still more leniently,^ par ticularly since the death of Jesus was now understood to be the indispensable link in the chain of events leading up to his final manifestation in messianic glory. The idea that his executioners had condemned him through ignorance was complementary to the disciples' own failure adequately to perceive the messianic char acter of his work previous to his resurrection. As they excused themselves on the ground of short-sightedness so they probably would be disposed to excuse, for a similar reason, those who had crucified Jesus. Much less would they at the outset think of upbraid ing the Jews for failure to recognize the messianic claims of the earthly Jesus. Since his personal followers had been so tardy in this respect and had not arrived at any full appreciation of his messiahship — for this is the repre sentation of the earliest tradition — ^until they attained their resurrection faith and received the accompanying outpouring of the Spirit, it would be manifestly absurd for them to charge outsiders with deficiency of beUef. Failure to believe that Jesus was the coming Messiah, not doubt about his messiahship while upon earth, was the main complaint which the early preachers would have to urge against their Jewish hearers. This was a criticism of the Jews for rejectmg the Christian preachers' assertions about Jesus, and not an accusation against them for rejecting Jesus' teaching abou*^ himself. 'Rom. 9:30— 10:4; 11:25-32. "Cf. Acts 3:17; 13:27. 142 The Evolution of Early Christianity This latter phase of criticism doubtless developed at an early date, as the disciples' own mission was inter preted primarily in terms of prophetic preaching. But they seem at first to have placed chief stress upon Jesus' career as a prophetic teacher. Our custom of distinguishing two types of primitive gospel tradition, sayings and doings, while misleading if used too rigidly, does serve to designate two main interests prominent among the framers of early tradition. The non-Markan source materials employed in common by Matthew and Luke are mainly of the "saying" tj^e. Jesus' work finds its climax in the assertion that the poor have the gospel preached to them and that that man is blessed who does not stumble at this interpretation of Jesus' mission.' Similarly in Acts, chap. 3, Jesus is the martyr- prophet whom God had promised to raise up from among the people of Israel, and who by his message should bless them in turning them away from their iniquities. This portrait is evidently primitive, being derived from one of the sources employed by the author of Acts. It certainly is not a picture such as a later writer would create on the basis of the much more elaborate repre sentation of Jesus in his earthly messianic career described by Mark and incorporated into the Third Gospel. In the earUer picture Jesus, like the first dis ciples, is a prophet of the coming kingdom with a mes sage of moral reform and renewed consecration to God, a message with which Jewish audiences had, in a general way, long been familiar. None of these circumstances is Ukely to have brought Jews and Christians into very bitter conflict, though 'Matt. 11:5 f.; Luke 7:22f.; cf. 4:16 ff. The Breach between Christians and Jews 143 the way for a serious breach was certainly being made ready. Even when beUevers came to place more stress upon the evidences of Jesus' right to messianic reverence during his Ufetime, and when they, having thus estab Ushed their own faith, could more consistently blame others for rejecting these credentials, there was still but little inducement for Jews to do more than turn a deaf ear to the Christian preachers' accusation. It was not a custom among the Jews to persecute messianic claimants; they left that work to the foreign ruler who was always on the watch to anticipate any messianic agitation which might arise. The Jews, for the most part, were anxious and expectant, more concerned with the credentials of any proposed Messiah than with his suppression. While they rejected Christians' advocacy of Jesus' claims, the main proof of these claims, even for the disciples, was an affair of the future. Hence Jewish unbehevers could easily rest satisfied, so far as the simple affirmation that Jesus had been or was yet to be the Messiah was concerned, with demanding a sign from heaven. They would believe when they should see Jesus fulfilUng the Mes siah's r61e by coming in glory. The disciples' asser tions were doubted, but they did not necessarily caU for persecution. It was easy to tolerate these extrem ists whose numbers cannot have been large in spite of Acts' ideaUzed multipUcation of church members,' while they remained loyal to traditional Judaism, and pro claimed with only slightly varying details the realiza tion of a reUgious hope, the cherishing of which was ' Cf. Brun, "Etwa 3000 Seelen Act 2, 41,'' Zeitschrift fiir die neu testamentliche Wissenschaft, XIV (1913), 94-96- 144 The Evolution of Early Christianity regarded by many Israelites to be the world-mission of their nation. The phases of the Christian propaganda which aroused more vigorous opposition were, according to Acts, three fold. There was first an arrest of the disciples on the charge of performing a miracle by unlawful means, a suspected violation of the Deuteronomic injunction against the practice of magic' Again, it was the disciples' reverence for, and proclamation of, Jesus raised and exalted at God's right hand, which gave further offense — perhaps seeming to Jews to endanger, if not actuaUy to deny, the monotheistic faith which they so zealously guarded.^ In the third place, there are intimations that Christians were persecuted because they had criticized the Jews for being untrue to the ancient faith, the edge of the criticism being turned against the Christians by charging them, falsely says Acts, with laxity toward the temple and the religious customs established by Moses.' 'Acts 3:6, 12-16; 4:72.; 5:16-18,40; Deut. 18:95. "Acts 4:33; 5:28ff.; 7:54-58; cf. 1:23; 4:1-3- 3 Acts 6 : 1 — 7 : 53. A fourth point, closely akin to the last, at which Christians are supposed to have made themselves intolerable in the eyes of the Jews, is often said to have been their laxity toward legaUsm, due to an inherent universaUsm in their faith received from Jesus, latent m the life and teaching of the primitive community, and brought to new and extended expression in the career of Paul. The validity of this hypothesis is, as we have discovered (see above, pp. 101-3), not so cer tain as has commonly been supposed, and so far as Acts is concerned, there are only vague hints that this feature was present in primitive Christianity (Acts 1:8). Here the representation is that the gospel goes to the Gentiles because of Jewish rejection of Jesus' messiahship, not because its universalistic features caUed forth hostiUty. This situation is as true of Paul in Acts' account as of other Christian preachers (Acts 8:1; 9:22 ff.; 13:46; 18:6; 22:19-21; 26:19-21; 28:25-28). The Breach between Christians and Jews 145 These different items stand variously blended and combined with other data in the Book of Acts. Hence it is not easy to ascertain the exact degree in which they represent the actual facts in the history of the early Christian community. As for the hostiUty aroused by miracle activity, one might suspect that the wonder ful deeds of the apostles were largely an ideaUzation on the part of the narrator, carrying over into Acts the miraculous element in the Gospels. That the narrative does contain much idealization cannot plausibly be denied.' Furthermore, if Jesus were allowed to work miracles so freely as the Gospels represent, it is scarcely probable, we might say, that the first disciples would be sharply opposed on this ground. This problem cannot be solved from the data of Acts alone. Appeal must also be made to the distinctive characteristics of the first Christians' life, to their Jewish antecedents, and to the testimony of Paul. The Christians' consciousness of special pneumatic endowment, with the accompanying ecstatic element in their life, forms a natural background for the practice of mighty works. The notion that an individual especially favored by the Deity was on that account possessed of extraordinary powers, not only finds a place in the reUgious psychology of primitive peoples everywhere, but is characteristic of certain types of beUevers in practically all ages. The Spirit-fiUed man of the Old Testament freely displayed miraculous abil ities.^ When God took of his Spirit from Moses, who himself performed various mighty works, and endowed 'E.g., 2:43; 5:15 L " See Volz, Der Geist Gottes, pp. 33 ff. 146 The Evolution of Early Christianity the seventy elders,' they at once became ecstatic prophets.^ When the Spirit of Yahweh came mightily upon Saul he, along with the bands of wandering prophets, exhibited a miraculous ecstatic frenzy.' The mysterious man of God from Judah who spoke against Jeroboam was attested by signs and even the presence of his dead body miraculously restrained the natural impulses of the Uon whose ferocity ceased with fulfilUng the divine command to slay the prophet.'' EUjah, the man of God par excellence, was a miracle-worker from the outset,' and EUsha who received the firstborn's portion of his master's spirit immediately exhibited his new endowment by means of a miraculous parting of the waters of the Jordan.' EUsha in turn sought at his death to convey the prophet's divine potency to Joash the king by placing his hands upon the king's hands, but the king proved to be a very poor medium of ecstatic frenzy.' When the early Christians associated their ecstatic Ufe with the idea of special spiritual endowment, and when they interpreted their mission in terms of prophetic preaching to prepare Israel for the imminent advent of the Messiah, it was only natural that they should expect for themselves displays of the divine favor similar to those shown to Moses, Elijah, and EUsha — prophets who had been raised up to save Israel in past crises, none of which could, however, equal in importance the crisis now imminent. The heroic age was about to ' Exod., chaps. 8-12; 14:218.; 15:233.; Num. 16:29-35; i7:sff. "Num. 11:25. 3i Kings 17:1. 3l Sam. 10:6 ff.; 19:23 f. 'II Kings 2:9-15. ¦t I Kings 13 :4 f., 28. ' II Kings 13 : 14-19. The Breach between Christians and Jews 147 dawn with unparalleled splendor, and the disciples were its forerunners. At first they may have thought the end so near that the work of Elijah, who was to return and prepare Israel for the coming of the great and terrible day of Yahweh had been intrusted to their hands.' Elijah had been the greatest of the miracle-working prophets, and the preparatory work preceding the end of the age might well be expected to show these same characteristics. Thus far we have been dealing mainly with mere possibiUties. Paul's letters supply a more certain historical basis. He speaks as though the working of miracles was generaUy recognized to be a fundamental feature of early Christianity. In his list of significant persons within the church, apostles stand first, prophets second, teachers third; in his Ust of important activities the gradation arranged in the descending scale runs, miracles (5wa/iets), gifts of healings, helps, guides, varieties of tongues.^ The leading personaUties in the 'Mal. 4:5 f. Just what early Christians actually did with this prophecy is not clear. In some circles John the Baptist's work was, by imphcation at least, identified with that of the promised Elijah (Matt. 3:4; 17:9-13; Mark 1:6; 9:11-13). Yet opinion was not unanimous. Matt. 11:14 makes the identification subject to one's wiUingness to believe it. The Gospel of Luke says John came "in the spirit and power of Elijah" (1:17), and this evangelist seems more reluctant than Mark and Matthew to identify John with Elijah. Other tradition affirms, or makes John himself affirm, that he is not Elijah (Acts i3:24f.; John 1:20; cf. 1:21, 25; 6:14; 7:41 f.). There were two main considerations affecting early Christian interpretation of this subject: (i) fluctuation of opinion regarding the time of Parousia, and so doubt as to when Elijah was to return, and (2) the necessity of meeting problems raised by the presence of John's movement side by side with the Christian movement. But as neither of these problems had become acute in the earliest period, it is doubtful whether the first Christians discussed the question of John's relation to Elijah. "I Cor. 12:28; cf. vss. 8ff. 148 The Evolution of Early Christianity community would, of course, display the most important activities, hence the appropriateness of citing as evidence of his apostolic authority the "miracles" which were wrought in connection with his preaching in Corinth.' He often refers to the dynamic display {Svvami) which attended his work generally. His gospel came to the Thessalonians not simply as a spoken message, but as a convincing miraculous manifestation of pneumatic activity.^ The Corinthians had been evangelized in the sairie manner,' and Paul reminds the Romans that throughout his entire missionary career Christ wrought through him for the conversion of the Gentiles, not only in preaching, but also in signs and wonders perforraed by the dynamic of the Holy Spirit.'' Did Paul claim this abiUty for himself alone? Ap parently not, for other Christians, in the PauUne churches at least, had this spiritual power. Among the diversity of charismata displayed in Corinth some persons exercised gifts of healings (xapiajuaTa 'Mnaroiv) while others worked miracles {SwafjieLs) , though these several gifts were the endowment of the same Spirit in every instance.^ Thus the fundamental condition of wonderful works is spiritual equipment, shared by ' II Cor. 12:12: "Truly the signs of an apostle were wrought among you in all patience by signs [cnip,eiois] and wonders [r^patriii] and miracles [Svvdp.eini']." The same language is used in Acts 2:22 to defend the uniqueness of Jesus: dvdpa iirodedeiynivov diri rod Oeov elt i/jids Svv6,p,i 79- 200 The Evolution of Early Christianity father, you are my father .... in the sanctuary you bore me." Other ancient Babylonian kings affirm that they were nourished by a goddess with holy milk.' But evidence that the king was ever deified outright as in Egypt is very meager, and even the claim to divine sonship is said to be less in evidence in later times. Radau thinks that the Babylonians' hesitation in ascrib ing deity to their kings is due to Sumerian influence, which dulled the original Semitic notion that the king is always the Son of God, "nay, even a god himself."^ However this may be, the monarch is still distin guished by the unique relation between himself and the gods, a relation which impUes, even when it does not explicitly affirm, divine descent. He is always their favorite, they instruct him for the discharge of his duty, and he is in general their agent in the exercise of his functions as sovereign. A few sentences from the prologue to Hammurabi's Code will illustrate this attitude: "When the lofty king Anu, king of Anunnaki, and Bel, Lord of heaven and earth, who determines the destiny of the land, committed the rule of all mankind to Marduk, the chief son of Ea; . . . . when they pro nounced the lofty name of Babylon .... and in its midst established an everlasting kingdom whose founda tions were as firm as heaven and earth, at that time Anu and Bel called me, Hammurabi, the exalted prince, the worshiper of the gods, to cause justice to prevaU in the ' E.g., Ennatum, Entemena, Lugalzaggisi. For references see Lietz- mann, Der Weltheiland (Bonn, 1909), pp. 48 f. " Radau, Early Babylonian History (Oxford, 1900). On the relation of Sumerians and Semites see E. Meyer, Abhandlungen der KimigUch- Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philosophisch-historische Classe (1906), III, 1-125. The Religious Significance of Emperor-Worship 201 land, to destroy the wicked and the evU, to prevent the strong from opposing the weak, to go forth lUce the sun over the black-headed race, to enlighten the land, and to further the welfare of the people. Hammurabi, the governor named by Bel am I, who brought about plenty and abundance .... who rejoiced the heart of Marduk, his lord, who daily served in Esagila, of the seed royal which Sin begat, who filled the city Ur with plenty, the pious and suppliant one .... the exalted one .... the divine city king, wise and intelUgent .... the lord adorned with scepter and crown whom the wise God Ma-ma has clothed with complete power.'" Among the Hebrews also kingship had a distinctly religious character. The ideal monarch who possessed a special endowment of the spirit became the Son of God through divine anointing and was henceforth Yahweh's vicegerent upon earth. When the succession of rulers failed in Israel, or when the actual kings fell short of the divine standard, the ideal itself was not abandoned but was projected far into the future. One day a prince would arise who would be endowed with a full measure of the Spirit and would establish over all the earth a kingdom of righteousness — an accomplishment to be effected through "the zeal of Yahweh of hosts."^ In the process of time the conception of the sovereign's divinity was so extended in some circles of thought that God himself was the only monarch whose authority was to be recognized;' or his true representative was to be a » Harper, The Code of Hammurabi (Chicago, 1904), pp. 3 ff. "Isa. 9:7; cf. ii:i ff. 3 The Zealots affirmed that God was their only riyep.6va Kai Scittottjii, and they refused to caU any man SeirirbTris (Josephus, Ant., XVIII, i, 6). 202 The Evolution of Early Christianity pre-existent heavenly being who would descend to earth to destroy evil and set up the eternal kingdom of God. Thus the idea of rulership had an emphatically reUgious content, the king being either God himself or his espe cially equipped representative. Politics were primarily a concern of the gods, and the king exercised a divinely delegated authority as the vicegerent of heaven rather than the representative of men. He possessed God-given endowments which set him apart from ordinary mortals, yet he was not the object of his subjects' religion, not even in Egypt, where he was believed to be the very in carnation of the sun-god. On the contrary, his reUgious position was much more nearly that of the ideal reUgious person, officiating in the ritual in an exemplary manner on important occasions. Even the Pharaonic deity-king was not free from the necessity of strict ceremonial observances. It was not the figure of the ruler which gave the monarchical idea its unique religious signifi cance in the Orient; it was rather the monarchical position which made the ruler significant. Everything rested upon the fundamental notion that monarchy was a divine institution, a heaven-sent boon to mankind. The ruler's position was unique because he represented the gods rather than the people. He received laws from heaven which he communicated to his subjects, they rendered him obedience resembUng in kind that which they gave the deity, but they formally worshiped only the mighty gods who ruled over both the monarch and his subject. This notion of the divine status of the monarchical idea continued down to Graeco-Roman times and formed an important item in the early Chris tians' reUgious environment. The ReUgious Significance of Emperor-Worship 203 Greece and Rome originally presented a very different situation. Their conception of government was funda mentally democratic; it was the people rather than the gods who were primarily responsible for the national weal. Rulers were revered for their own attainments, their right to divine honors depending upon their own display of prowess. Gods were made in the image of great men, and men who had proved themselves superior in bravery, or generous in bestowing benefits upon their feUows, were at death elevated to the rank of divinity and worshiped accordingly. A few illustrations wiU suffice to remind us of the important role which hero- worship played among the Greeks, and also its bearing on the later practice of worshiping the monarch. Herodotus often refers to the custom of honoring heroic men and founders of cities with religious rites. When MUtiades died the Chersonesians, because he had built a wall to ward off the attacks of their enemies, sacrificed to him "as is usual to a founder" and insti tuted games in his honor.' Sometimes the custom was observed in obedience to instruction received from the oracle. This was the case with the Phocaeans who, on gaining possession of Hyela, estabUshed sacred rites to Cyrnus as a hero.^ Also to Xerxes' giant friend Artachaees, who was buried at Acanthus, the Acanthians "in obedience to an oracle offered sacrifice as to a hero invoking him by name."' PhiUppus, son of Butacides, "on account of his beauty" was honored with a shrine upon his sepulcher and was propitiated with sacrifices.'' Thucydides' records another good illustration. Brasidas, ' vi. 38. 3 vii. 117. " 1,167. ¦'V. 47- sv. II. 204 The Evolution of Early Christianity leader of the Spartan forces stationed in AmphipoUs, was slain in a bold but successful sally against the Athenians. He was buried at the public expense, a fence was built about his tomb, offerings were made to him as a hero, he was honored with games and annual sacrifices, and he was called the founder of the settle ment, his memory supplanting that of Hagnon who had formerly been so honored. These pragmatic tests for determining one's right to religious honors were not confined exclusively to heroic deeds. PhiUppus, as we saw, was revered because of his beauty, but Herodotus says this procedure was quite exceptional. Persons who had shown remarkable wis dom, or who had displayed poetical skiU, also became objects of reverence. Already in the fifth century B.C. Empedocles had been honored by his followers as a god, Protagoras was said to have been the son of Apollo, Aristotle erected an altar to Plato, and later we find a cult of Homer in Alexandria. The Greek mind readily employed reUgious categories to express its reverence for distinguished personaUties. This was not merely a disposition of the populace; it was also true of the edu cated. The divine was recognized in the human, so that the divinity and pre-existence of the human soul were easily attainable ideas. The poUtical theories of Plato and Aristotle, constructed on this type of anthropology, made the ideal ruler a veritable divinity among men, ruUng without regard to law because "he himself is the law." Thus Greek thinking arrived, though by a differ ent road, at a conception of rulership essentially more despotic than that of the Orientals. The fundamental difference was that in the Orient theology had been the The Religious Significance of Emperor-Worship 205 determining factor in the religious interpretation of monarchy, while in Greece the point of departure was anthropology. The Greek theory of monarchy started with man and made of him its god; the oriental notion started with God and made the monarch in his image. Both of these tendencies survived until Christian times and were employed by the missionaries in defining their notion of both the new kingdom of God and the mon archical functions of Jesus. The process of fusing these two conceptions began with the career of Alexander the Great. He probably learned from Aristotle the Platonic conception of the . ideal republic with its man-god king, and he held in high esteem the memory of ancient heroes. One of his first acts on crossing the Hellespont was to visit Troy in order to pay his respects to the heroes of that conffict before starting out on his own mission of conquest. After arriving in Egypt he visited the oracle of Zeus- Ammon, where tradition says he was pronounced by the priest to be a son of the deity. Strabo reports various traditions to the same effect. The long-silent oracle of Apollo among the Branchidae revived in Alexander's time and the Milesian ambassadors carried back to Memphis numerous answers of the oracle regarding Alexander's descent from Zeus and his future victories. The Erythraean prophetess had also affirmed Alexander's divine descent.' Then came the further display of his prowess in the East, where he surrounded his person with the splendors of the Persian court and added to the amazement of his generation the conquest of nearly the whole of the then known world. ' Strabo, xvii. 1. 43. 2o6 The Evolution of Early Christianity The death of Alexander's favorite companion, Hephaes tion, called forth clearly Alexander's own ideas on the subject of hero-worship. He at once sent messengers to the temple of Zeus in Egypt to inquire whether it was permitted to offer sacrifices to Hephaestion as a god. On learning that this could not be done, but that his dead friend might be honored as a hero, Alexander ordered chapels erected to him and insisted that a reverence very closely akin to that shown the gods should be paid to Hephaestion.' Alexander's zeal in this matter was so great that he wrote Cleomenes, governor of Egypt, "If I find the sacred rites and chapels of the hero Hephaestion well completed I wUl not only pardon you any crimes you may have com mitted in the past, but in the future you shaU suffer no unpleasant treatment from me, however great may be the crimes you commit." As Cleomenes had little interest in reUgion, but was much addicted to "crimes" for which he might suffer severely when Alexander dis covered them, the inducement which Alexander held out to him reveals the king's insight into human nature as well as his willingness to sacrifice the welfare of the living for the honor of the dead. Whether Alexander ever claimed divine honors for himself is a disputed point,^ but he certainly accepted such without protest. The lonians, probably during his lifetime, out of gratitude for the Uberty he had won for them, dedicated a sacred grove to him above Chalcideis and celebrated, probably on his birthday, yearly games in his honor.' Greece proper was doubtless less apprecia- ' Arrian, Anabasis, vii.' 14, 23. 3 Strabo, xiv. i. 31. " See Kornemann, op. cit., p. 58, n. 4. The Religious Significance of Emperor-Worship 207 tive of Alexander's services, for he had figured as their conqueror before he started upon his eastern career. But the Greeks of the mainland so far overcame their prejudices by the year 323 that shortly before Alex ander's death messengers were sent to him wearing golden wreaths upon their heads and offering him a golden crown, thus signifying that they accorded him divine respect.' His Stoic biographer, Arrian, excuses Alexander's acceptance of these compUments on the ground that it was a concession to the customs and thinking of the conquered peoples, and so was justifiable as a practical governmental poUcy. But the Hephaes tion incident alone shows that the notion of deification was so deeply ingrained in Alexander's own thinking that suggestions of his divinity during his lifetime prob ably did not seem to him wholly vain, particularly after he had come into closer touch with the Orient and had learned the reUgious significance it attached to the monarch. If Alexander had come to feel that he was the instrument of heaven in the estabUshment of world- empire,'' it would not be difficult for him to take seri ously the reUgious formaUties connected with his name, although such reverence had commonly been reserved for Greek heroes until death.' A cult of Alexander sprang up immediately after his death. Ptolemy, who gained possession of the dead ' Arrian, Anabasis, vii. 23. " So Plutarch, Alex., i. 3 Lysander is an exception if Duris, who is the source of Plutarch's information, is reliable {Lysander, 18), but Duris belonged to the Hellen istic age when the worship of Uving rulers had become fully established, and he may have read the earlier history in terms of later thinking. See Diodorus, xvi. 20, 92, for suggestions that Dion of Syracuse and Philip of Macedon had shared heroic honors whUe stiU alive. 2o8 The Evolution of Early Christianity king's body, carried it to Egypt, ultimately interring it in Alexandria where a temple was reared to Alexander's memory and sacrifices were offered to him as a hero.' Eumenes affirmed that Alexander had appeared to him in a dream and indicated his wish still to be the leader of the people. Eumenes accordingly erected a beauti ful tent as a symbol of the dead king's presence. Within it was a throne with royal accouterments and before it an altar for burnt offerings. Instead of the images of ancient deities only, which had been used by Alexander in stamping his coins, Alexander's own image with the horns of the god Ammon appears upon the coinage. It would seem that an Alexander cult was generaUy popular with his successors, particularly in Asia and Egypt. While this reverence doubtless bore the char acter of Greek hero-worship, it is also probable that the disposition Alexander had felt to worship Hephaestion as a god would find actual expression in the worship of Alexander. According to Suidas, Antipater alone of the Diadochi thought it sacrUege to call Alexander "god." It was not long before his successors and their descend ants appUed to themselves in their capacity as sovereign similar notions. After Alexander's death worship of the Uving ruler soon became an estabUshed practice. The custom grew rapidly in Egypt and Syria. It appeared sporadically among the Greeks, but it made little headway in Macedonia. At first it was a spon taneous outburst of Greek gratitude or flattery, as when the city of Scepsis in 311 B.C. consecrated a sacred inclosure to Antigonus, erected him an altar, and set up his statue. In 307 the Athenians, in gratitude for ' Diodorus, xviii. 28. I'he Religious Significance of Emperor-Worship 209 deUverance from the Macedonians, called Demetrius and his father Antigonus "savior-gods," built them an altar, established a feast in their honor, and chose a priest for the new cult. Three years later the Rhodians, in recognition of the assistance Ptolemy had given them against Demetrius, built Ptolemy an altar and estab lished a yearly feast in his honor. Deification of the living monarch did not appear immediately in Egypt, but when once the custom be gan it was carried much farther than in Greece. When Ptolemy I died, his son Ptolemy Philadelphus declared him to be a new god, "Ptolemy Soter," and established a yearly festival to be celebrated on the king's birthday. Ptolemy and Alexander were now honored side by side, the worship of each becoming a state cult. When Philadelphus' mother, Berenice, died in 279, she was at once deified and her cult was joined to that of her hus band. The two were worshiped as " savior-gods " {deal iTonrjpes). In 271 the sister-wife of PhUadelphus died and she too was immediately apotheosized as "Aphrodite Arsinoe PhUadelphus." Her worship be came a state cult in Alexandria, and probably also in Arsinoe. Then came the significant transition from the deification of the dead to the deification of the living ruler. PhUadelphus was given a place beside his sister- wife and the cult of the living king and the dead queen was officially recognized, the two being worshiped under the designation "brother-gods" {deal d3€Xpodtos), particularly when this specific deity had displayed his power of triumph over death,' readily beUeved this experience to be a foretaste of the eternal bUss awaiting the worshiper in the next world. Although these rites were subjected to criticism, as when Plato remarked that an immortality of drunken ness seemed to be thought the highest reward of virtue, yet they were generally believed to involve a real Asia Minore culte (Dissertationes philologicae Halenses, Vol. XXI, 2, Halle, 1913); Loisy, "Dionysos et Orph^e," Revue d'histoire et de lit terature religieuses, NouveUe s6rie, IV (1913), 130-54. ' iv. 78 ff. " See references in FarneU, op. cit., V, 285 f. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 299 spiritual communion with the divine. Euripides' prob ably is expressing current opinion when he says that one who knows the mysteries "is pure in life, and revel ing on the mountains hath the Bacchic communion in his soul." In fact a distinction was made between those who merely participated in the rites and those who reaUzed the genuine Bacchic experience — "for indeed they say concerning the mysteries 'Many are the bearers of the thyrsus but the bacchanals are few."" Participation in the life of the god was reaUstically attained by drinking the blood and eating raw the flesh of the sacred victim in which the god was assumed to be incarnated. Haste had to be made in devouring the victim lest the divinity should escape, and this gave the feast its frenzied character. The animal was some times a bull, a goat, or a fawn; and in earlier times even a human being probably was devoured. This seems to be the imagery behind a poem, doubtfuUy ascribed to Theocritus, apparently written in honor of a boy nine years old whose right to initiation is justified by the piety of his father: "To the children of pious fathers belong the good things rather than to those that come of impious men."' Besides eating the animal, wearing its skin as an emblem of assimilation to the deity was also common. The frenzied worshiper, having thus acquired the strength of the god, could dispense blessings to others by prophesying, healing diseases, or controlUng the power of nature. In short, he who possessed the ' Bacck, 75 ff. ' Plato, Phaedo, 69C. 3 Theocritus, xxvi {Bacch.). 31; cf. Paul's belief in the sanctity of the children when even one parent is a Christian (I Cor. 7:14). 300 The Evolution of Early Christianity divine potency which exhibited itself in ecstasy could convert the desert into a garden "flowing with milk and honey.'" The Graeco-Roman world was thoroughly famiUar with the cult of Dionysus, which had already gained such headway among the Romans by the beginning of the second century B.C. that a strenuous effort was made to drive it out of Italy.' But the worship of Dionysus was so closely akin to that of other mystery- deities, and his form was so easily fused with that of Attis, Adonis, or Osiris, that it is difficult to trace inde pendently the influence of the Dionysus mysteries. The type of religion was widely prevalent, whether bear ing the name of Dionysus or that of a kindred deity.' The Orphic culf is only a variant form of the Diony- sian, with a stronger emphasis upon theological specu lation. Dionysus, who is frequently called Zagreus, plays a prominent part in the system. He is devoured by the Titans who thus absorb his essence. They are then burned up by Zeus and their ashes cast to the winds, ' Euripides, Bacch., 143; Plato, Ion, S34A. See further FarneU, op. cit., V, 300, n. 73. " See the account of Livy, xxxix. 8-20. 3 For the fusion of Dionysus with other gods, as weU as the different Dionysi, see Herodotus, ii. 48 f.; Cicero, De deer, nat., iu. 23; TibuUus, i. 8. ¦• In addition to references cited above, p. 297, n. 2, see Taylor, The Mystical Hymns of Orpheus (London, 18963) ; Gruppe, Die griechischen Culte und Mythen (Leipzig, 1887), I, 612-74; Dieterich, De hymnis Orphicis (Marburg, 1891), reprinted in the same author's Kleine Schriften (Leipzig, 191 1), pp. 69-110; Hauck, De hymnerum orphicorum aetate (Breslau, 191 1); C. H. Moore, "Greek and Roman Ascetic Tendencies," Harvard Essays on Classical Subjects (New York, 191 2), pp. 1038.; Diels, Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, II, 163-78. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 301 but as these ashes contain the vitaUty of Dionysus they become the source of divine life in aU things, and particu larly in the human soul. Thus the soul by its very con stitution is divine and the body is its carnal prison house from which it is constantly seeking deliverance in death. But death was of itself no sure deUverance. The soul which had not been purified by the rites of religion was confronted by the miry pit of Hades, whence it might be forced to return and take up its abode for further - punishment in some animal. The purified soul, on the other hand, inherited immortal delight. Conse quently the supreme effort of one's earthly Ufe was to purge the soul of bodily defilement. This was accom pUshed through mystic rites, prescribed abstinences and assimilation to the deity by means of sacrifice, Ubations, and prayers. The mystical and redemptive character of the religion is illustrated from the Orphic tablets.' The devotee says: "I am a child of earth and the starry heaven, but my race is of heaven (alone) . This ye know yourselves. And lo, I am parched with thirst and I perish. Give me quickly the cold water flow ing from the lake of memory." Again, "Hail thou who hast suffered the suffering. This thou hast never suffered before. Thou art become God from man. ' ' And further : "I come a suppUant to holy Persephone that of her grace she receive me to the seats of the haUowed. Happy and blessed one thou shalt be god instead of mortal." Orphism, like Pythagoreanism which it in some respects resembled,' did not maintain itself as a distinct ' Cf. Harrison, Prolegomena te the Study of Greek Religion, pp. 660 ff.; Comparetti, Laminette orfiche (Firenze, 1910). " Cf. Herodotus, U., 81. 302 The Evolution of Early Christianity movement in the Hellenistic age, yet its influence was strongly felt in secondary forms. Orphic doctrines and practices were variously appropriated by the popular philosophers as well as by influential mystery-cults, and thus their influence continued long after the dis appearance of formal Orphic brotherhoods. In addition to the mysteries of Greece proper, the eastern lands and Egypt suppUed the same type of reUgion in still greater abundance. To describe the oriental mystery-cults in detail is too large a task for the present. It will be sufficient for our inimediate needs if we note their leading characteristics and observe the extent of their influence before the rise of Chris tianity. _. The Phrygian cult of the mother-goddess, Cybele, and her consort, Attis, came to occupy a promineiiT place within the reUgious syncretism of HeUenistic times.' Cybele was a wild nature-deity worshiped on the top of the mountains, ' especially on Mount Ida. The chief seats of her cult were Cyzicus, Sardis^ aiid Pessinus. \ She was known, like Demeter, as the source of all Ufe in nature, and her rites had a correspondingly orgiastic character. Connected with her was a male deity, Attis, who personified the death of nature in winter.. ' For detailed information on the Phrygian religion see Showerman, The Great Mother ef the Gods (Madison, 1901); Hepding, Attis, seine Mythen und sein Kult (Giessen, 1903); Frazer, Adonis, Attis, Osiris (New York, 1906"), pp. 219-65; DiU, Roman Society from Nero te Marcus AureUus, pp. 547-59; Cumont, Oriental ReUgions in Roman Paganism, pp. 46-72; Toutain, Les culks paiens, 1, ii, 73-119; Wissowa, Religion und Kultus der RSmer, pp. 317-27; Schmidt, Kultiibertragungen, pp. 1-30; Loisy, " Cybele et Attis," Revue d'hiskire et de littirature religieuses, Nouvelle s^rie, IV (1913), 289-326. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 303 and its revival in the spring. ) The myths about Attis vary in details,' but they all have the same general import.^, Attis dies, either at the hand of an enemy or ty self-mutilation, and the goddess mourns until he is ; restored to life. The deity's triumph over death is made the basis of the ritual by which the believer avails himself of the god's help in effecting a simUar victory for mortals. / 'The Greeks became acquainted with this Phrygian Ureligion at least as early as the sixth century b.c Both Cybele and Attis were 'worshiped at various places in Greece before the beginning of our era, and they were easily fused with other gods of a similar character already known to the Greeks.' The Phrygian goddess enjoyed so much prestige by the year 204 b.c that her cult was officially introduced into Italy.' The Romans were sore pressed by Hannibal, a plague had carried off many of the Roman soldiers, and a shower of meteors had faUen upon the earth. The Sybilline books when consulted advised bringing the worship of the Phrygian goddess to Rome. Accordingly messengers were sent to Pessinus where they procured a sacred meteoric stone which they conveyed to Rome and installed in great solemnity on the Palatine in AprU 204 b.c Fol lowing this the Romans were successful in their conflict with Carthage, Cybele was honored with a temple, and from that time on her position was officiaUy estabUshed. ' Cf. Diodorus, iu. 58 f.; Ovid, Fasti, iv. 223 ff.; Pausanias, vii. 17; Arnobius, v. 5-8. " Cf. FarneU, CM«i, etc., Ill, 289-393; Gruppe, Griechische Mythologie, pp. 1519-54. 3 Particulars are given by Livy, xxix. 10-14. 304 The Evolution of Early Christianity A glimpse into the character of her worship in Catul lus' day (87-47 B.C.) is given in his poem caUed Atys which shows this reUgion to have been one of great ecstatic frenzy in which the devotee sacrificed his man hood to the goddess, thus assimilating himself to her nature. He performed certain initiatory rites, clothed himself in a special garment, participated in the madden ing dance, and became a bondsman of Cybele forever. Catullus' description is at the same time a protest — perhaps to some extent a caricature — but it probably gives a true picture of the orgiastic nature of the cult. Not, however, until the time of Augustus and his suc cessors in the first century A.D. did Cybele-Attis worship really thrive at Rome. The celebration of the yearly festival as it was observed under official patronage in the time of Claudius was an elaborate mystery-drama extending from the fifteenth to the twenty-seventh of March. The death of Attis, mourning for the dead god and rejoicing at his resurrection, constituted the promi nent features of the ceremony. The worshipers per formed various rites to indicate union with the deity, whose career was represented in a kind of mystery-play depicting the triumph over death.' Thus the Cybele-Attis religion had reached out from its native Phrygian home, gaining official recognition ' Cumont, Oriental Religions, pp. 58 f., gives a detaUed description of this spring festival. The "Taurobolium," as weU as the " CrioboUum,'' is not known to have been performed before 134 a.d. Then it appears in Italy, but it unquestionably had an oriental origin and so must have been practiced at a considerably earUer date. It may also have had Mithraic connections. The description given by Prudentius {Peris- taphanon, x. loii ff.) purports to be based on personal observation. A perforated platform was erected over a pit in which the neophyte Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 305 and support in the capital of the empire, while Chris tianity was still making its first appearance in the home land of the Cybele-Attis cult. It is a more difficult task to define the religious influ ences which emanated from the regions of Cilicia and Syria.' Tradition suppUes a variety of gods and god desses, but leaves their mutual relations and the details of their worship obscure. Yet, in spite of the chaotic condition of our information, the main lines of religious development are discoverable, and they disclose features fundamentally similar to those of the Phrygian cult. We find here a goddess mother occupying a central place in the cultus, and associated with her is a male deity whose death is lamented and his resurrection celebrated with rejoicing. placed himself. The steer was kiUed above and the blood dripped through upon the worshiper who eagerly received it upon his clothing, face, and lips, even drinking it as it struck his mouth. This baptism was beUeved to purify the neophyte; he died to his old life and arose to a new, having been reborn through the bloody bath. See, further, Cumont, "Le Taurobole et le culte de BeUone," Revue d'histoire et de litterature religieuses, VI (1901), 97-110, and Oriental Religions, pp. 66 ff.; Hepding, Attis, pp. 177-205; Frazer, Adonis, Attis, Osiris, pp. 229 f. ' See Cumont, Oriental Religions, pp. 103-34; Frazer, Adonis, etc., pp. 1-2 16; VeUay, Le culte et les files d' Adonis-Thammous dans V orient antique (Paris, 1904); von Baudissin, Adonis und Esmun: Eine Unter suchung zur Geschichte des Glaubens an AuferskhungsgStter und an HeilgStter (Leipzig, 1911); Toutain, ep. cit., pp. 35-72; Strong and Garstang, The Syrian Goddess (London, 1913); Wissowa, Religion und Kultus der RSmer, pp. 359-68; Gruppe, Griechische Mythologie, pp. 1582-86; W. R. Smith, ReUgion of the Semites (London, 1894"); La grange, Etudes sur ks religions semitiques (Paris, 1905); LuckenbiU, "The Early ReUgion of Palestine," BibUcal Werld, XXXV (1910), 296-308 and 368-79; Paton, "The Cult of the Mother-Goddess in Ancient Palestine," ibid., XXXVI (1910), 26-38. 3o6 The Evolution oj Early Christianity These ideas in and about Syria seem to have their natural antecedents in Babylonia where Ishtar is the deified embodiment of mother-Ufei She is the Ash^ toreth of the bibUcal writers, the Ash tart of Phoenicia, the Astarte and Aphrodite of the Greeks. Ishtar is an ancient figure in Babyloma and her position is a fairly stable one throughout all the changes affecting Assyrian and Babylonian reUgion. Her influence continued to be felt long after many once greater divinities had been forgotten. She is the mother-goddess of prosperity and fertility who teaches men the arts of civiUzation and has a constant care for their welfare. Associated with her is the male deity Tammuz, a youthful god who is slain, remains for a period in the lower world, and is later revived. As Ishtar personifies the source of life, Tammuz represents Ufe in its natural manifestation — ¦ the constantly rotating cycle of birth and death. Hence the prominence of lamentation in his cult, a practice which in the time of Ezekiel had been adopted by Jews and was being carried on by the women,- at the nortii:^ gate of the temple-i — ' ' " The Babylonian Ishtar became Ashtart in Phoenicia,^ with apparently an important cult. As early as the third century B.C. she is the patron goddess of the kings of Sidon.' Both King Tabnith and his father were her priests. The coffin inscription of his son Eshmun'azar tells us not only that Tabnith's wife was a priestess of 'Ezek. 8:14. For laments for Tammuz see Gressmann's Altori entalische Texte und Bilder, I, 93-96; or Prince, "A Hymn to Tammuz" in the Journal of the American Oriental Society, XXX (1909-10), 94-100, and "A Tammuz Fragment,'' ibid., XXXIII (1913), 345-48. " For data see G. A. Cooke, A Text Book ef North Semitic Inscriptions (Oxford, 1903), passim. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 307 Ashtart, but that a male deity, Eshmun, was associated with her in Sidon. Eshmun'azar boasts of his line that it "built the houses of the gods, the house of Ashtart in Sidon, the land of the sea, and we caused Ashtart to dweU there, making her glorious; and we are they who buUt a house for Eshmun in the holy field, the well of Yidal in the mountain, and we caused him to dwell there^jnaMng-Iiim glorious.'' . j It is probable that this male deity associated with /Ashtart plays a role similar to that of Tammuz, but a jbetter known name of the god who figures in this capacity is ^Adonis. The equivalence of Adonis and Tammuz is now generaUy admitted, as well as the fact that Aphrodite was a counterpart of Ashtart, or Astarte as the Greeks called her. In remarking upon the different Venuses of mythology Cicero says, "the fourth was a Syrian .... who is called Astarte and is said to have been married to Adonis.'" And the Greek poetess Sappho mentions the weeping for Adonis — ^an item which shows not only connections with Tammuz, but also the particular character of the cult. The myths about Adonis and Aphrodite as told by various Greek and Latin writers have the same import. The slain — or, in some myths, stolen — ^god descends to the lower world; Aphrodite agonizes in grief at his disappearance; finally he is restored in the springtime and continues with the revolution of the seasons to die and rise again each year. The cult of Aphrodite nnd Ad'^"i"--^^'*'^^'""= the same type of beUef and practices as that which meets us in the other mystery-reUgions. The goddess is the per sonification of maternal Ufe and the male deity is thS' ¦ De deor. nat., iii. 23. 3o8 The Evolution of Early Christianity embodiment of the redemptive idea — life in action. The Adonis festival held at the court of Ptolemy II early in the third century B.C., as described by Theoc ritus,' has a striking general resemblance to the Attis festival of Claudius' day. A mystic drama depicted the death of Adonis, lamentation followed his decease, and his resurrection was greeted with outbursts of joy. Among the sacred things displayed were representations of Aphrodite and Adonis joined in wedlock, the death of the god, the mourning of the goddess, and Adonis' restoration to life. In the words of Theocritus, the musician at the sacred festival sings: The bridal bed for Adonis spread of my own making is; Cypris hath this for her wrapping, Adonis that for his. Of eighteen years, of nineteen, is tumed the rose-limbed groom; His pretty lip is smooth to sip, for it bears but flaxen bloom. And now she's in her husband's arms, and so we'll say good night; But tomorrow we'll come with the dew, the dew, and take hands and bear him away Vi^here plashing wave the shore doth lave, and there with locks undight And bosoms bare all shining fair wiU raise this shrilling lay: O sweet Adonis, none but thee of the children of gods and men 'Twixt overworld and underworld doth pass and pass again; That cannot Agamemnon, nor the Lord o' the Woeful Spleen" 'Nor the first' of the twice ten children that came of the Troyan queen. Nor Patroclus brave, nor Pyrrhus bold that home from the war did win. Nor none of the kith o' the old Lipith nor of them of Deucalion's kin — E'en Pelops' line lacks fate so fine, and Pelasgian Argos' pride. ' Text and EngUsh tr. by J. M. Edmonds, The Greek Bucolic Poets (New York, 1912)" pp. 175 ff. " Ajax. 3 Hector. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 309 Adonis sweet, Adonis dear. Be gracious for another year; Thou'rt welcome to thine own alway. And welcome we'll both cry today And next Adonis-tide. The cult of these deities spread in Hellenistic times from two chief centers, Byblos in Syria and Paphos in Cyprus. When Paul in Syria and Cyprus centuries later preached his message about the crucified and risen Lord of Christian faith, the Adonis religion was still thriving in these regions. Many members of the Christian missionary's gentile congregation would un doubtedly be perfectly famiUar with the mystic drama depicting the death of the god, they would have par ticipated in the rites of the cult, and would have enjoyed the reUgious satisfactions which that faith gave its votaries. Another female deity of Syria, whose genealogical connections are obscure, bore the name Atargatis. Her consort was Hadad, who appears in the Zenjirli inscrip tion which Bar-rekub erected in honor of his father Panammu (745-727 B.C.). Here Hadad's name is con nected with beUef in the immortality of the soul — an . idea especially fostered by all the mystery-religions. The lines referring to Hadad read:' "Whosoever of my sons shall hold the scepter and sit upon my seat and grow strong and sacrifice to Hadad .... and make mention of the name of Hadad, or shaU say. May the soul of Panammu eat with thee and may the soul of Panammu drink with thee .... may Hadad look favorably upon him!" Furthermore, a passage in ' Cooke, op. cit., pp. 180 ff. 3IO The Evolution of Early Christianity Zech. 12:11 which speaks of mouming for Hadadrimmon seems to indicate, as Gunkel thinks,' that Hadad was, Uke Tammuz and Adonis, a dying god in whose ritual lamentation was a characteristic item. But in HeUenistic times it is Atargatis herself about whom we hear most. Greek writers often refer to her simply as Sypia Ota ("Syrian goddess"), whence the Roman dea Syria, popularly corrupted into lasura. Her cult seems to have been widely disseminated over the Graeco-Roman world among the lower classes, especially among the slaves.' The great uprising among the slaves of Sicily in 134 B.C. was led by a devotee of the Syrian goddess who affirmed that he was acting under divine guidance and inspired by divine mania. Her worship apparently was of an ecstatic, mystic type like that of Cybele-Attis. Persia furnished, in Mithraism,' one of tlie strongest redemption-reUgions that appeared in the Graeco-Roman world. Mithra was an ancienl Iranian deity who was ' Zum religionsgeschichtlichen Verstdndnis des Neuen Testaments, p. 78, II. 5- " Yet for a time she was highly esteemed, even by the Roman emperor Nero, who "held in contempt aU religious^rites except those of the Syrian goddess." But this respect was shcat Uved (Suetonius, Nero, 66). 3 Some representative Uterature on Mithraism is Lajard, Recherches sur le culte public et les mysteres de Mithra en Orient et en Occident (Paris, 1867); Cumont, Textes et monuments figures relatifs aux mysteres de Mithra (2 vols., BruxeUes, 1896-99), Les mysteres de Mithra {ibid., igoo), EngUsh tr.. The Mysteries of Mithra (Chicago, 1910";, and Orkntal Religions, pp. 135-61; Dieterich, Eine MithrasUturgie; DiU, Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius, pp. 585-626; Gruppe, Griechische Mythologie, pp. 1591-1602; Wissowa, ReUgion und Kultus der Romer, pp. 368-73; BohUg, Die GeisteskuUur von Tarsos, pp. 89-107; Toutain Les cultes paiens, 1, ii, 121-77; Loisy, "Mithra," Revue d'histoire et de litkrature religieuses, NouveUe s&ie, IV (1913), 497-539. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 311 /subordinated to Ahura Mazda in the classical period I of Zoroastrianism but regained his popularity with new strength in later times. Already in the Avesta, Ahura Mazda declares: "Verily, when I created Mithra, the lord of wide pastures, 0 Spi tama! I created him as worthy of sacrifice, as worthy of prayer, as myself Ahura Mazda.'" Invoked "in his own name and with the proper words" he brings the worshiper sure help. /He is mediator between the great God, Ahura Mazda, land man. As the ever- watchful guardian of justice and truth, he is especially hostile toward evil demons. He is the enemy of all wickedness and the one who delivers righteous men from all troubles.- Both here -aildrliereaf ter he is the hope of those who pray : " Mayest thou keep us in both worlds, O Mithra, lord of wide pastures! both in this material world and in the world of the spirit, from the fiend of Death, from the fiend of Aeshma, from the fiendish hordes that lift up the spear of havoc, and from the onsets of ASshma." The Avesta also contains a Yasht' in honor of a god dess Ardvi Sura Anahita (or Anaitis), who is "the Ufe- increasing and holy, the herd-increasing and holy, the fold-increasing and holy, the wealth-increasing and holy, the country-increasing and holy; who makes the seed of aU males pure, who makes the womb of all females pure fdr bringing forth." She is the great river that waters all the earth, making it fruitful to support Ufe. To her the creator, Ahura Mazda, himself sacrificed in proper fashion, begging her to aid him in training up Zarathushtra to found the new reUgion. As a goddess ' The entire Mihir Yasht (X) is given up to the praise of Mithra. " The Aban Yasht (V). 312 The Evolution of Early Christianity of fertiUty she strongly resembles Ishtar, and some interpreters have therefore concluded that she came into Persia from the Semitic world.' However this may be, her position was at one time firmly estabUshed, although later her functions were largely appropriated by Mithra. In the fourth century B.C. both Mithra and Anahita occupied a prominent place in popular faith, notwith standing their subordinate position in the Zoroastrian system. Artaxerxes II is said to have erected the image of Anahita in Babylon, Susa, and Ecbatana, a custom which was not only followed in Persia, but extended to Damascus and Sardis.' From this time on Mithra and Anahita take their place beside Ahura Mazda, until finally the popular movement completely eclipses Zoroastrianism as the religion of the Persians. In the course of this development Mithra alone becomes the chief deity of the cult, assimilating to himself the princi pal characteristics of Anahita.' But this was not the only source from which Mithraism borrowed. From Greece it learned to chisel the god's image in human form, from Babylonia it learned astrology, from Phrygia it absorbed many features of the Cybele cult; in fact, its capacity for adjustment to environment is strikingly exhibited at several points in its career. Yet Mithraism had its own distinctive character as a religious move- ' So most recently J. H. Moulton, Early Zoroastrianism, pp. 238 fi. On the other hand,' G. F. Moore, History of ReUgions, I, 374, thinks there is "no sufficient ground for the opinion that the goddess herself was borrowed from the Semites.'' " Cited by Clement of Alexandria {Pret., V, 65) from Berosus' Chaldaics. 3 Herodotus, i. 131, mistakenly assumes that Mithra was a goddess. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 313 ment. The initiated passed through seven grades, assuming respectively at each stage the names Raven, Occult, Soldier, Lion, Persian, Runner of the Sun, and Father. ' Tliese~are"sirrvivaiB'frbm a primitive age when the devotee sought union with the deity by identifica tion with some animal sacred to the god. But when astrological influence made itself felt the seven stages of initiation came to prefigure the passage of the soul after death through the seven heavens to the final abode of the blessed. Each grade was reached by observing prescribed rites of a sacramental character consisting of ablutions, sacred meals, and other appro priate observances. The religious satisfactions held out to the votaries were numerous. Hope of a blessed immortality and a final righteous judgment were very prominent. Mithra was a mighty hero, mediating between the god of heaven and mortals, and leading the forces of good against the powers of evil. In the mythological age he had per- forihed heroic deeds for the benefit of mankind, thus becoming the special champion of humanity. After a last supper celebrating the success of his redemptive labors he ascended to heaven, whence he now ministered help to the faithful in their conflict with Satan and his hosts. After death the sinful soul was dragged down to the lower regions to be tortured, but a soul with enough good deeds to its credit to balance the bad soared aloft, ridding itself of all impurities and fleshly passions as it passed through the celestial regions. The entrance to each of the seven heavens could be passed only by those who had been initiated and had thereby leamed the proper passwords. Mithra was the helper 314 The Evolution of Early Christianity of the soul in its course, he received it in glory at last, and was to preside over a final judgment when he would return to earth, raise the dead, and bring the forces of evil to an end. The date at which Mithraism made its appearance in the Graeco-Roman world, and the stage of development which it had reached at tha t^ time... arcL-aa yet obscure questiQH5s__^l' In tHe" second and third centuries a.d. it fwas Christianity's most powerful rival throughout the '; whole Roman empire. But until the Ta^t quarter of the first centurjr apparently it had not gained a footho.ld outside Asia Minor, although it had been flourishing for centuries in the regions of Armenia, Pontus, Cappadocia, and Lydia, and had been the reUgion of the CiUcian pirates who unsuccessfully contended with the Romans under Pompey in 67 b.c' for the control of the eastem Mediterranean. The cult of Mithra had become so firmly established in CiUcia that Tarsus continued to worship him down to the end of the imperial period.' As early as the time of Nero the Mithraic religion was so highly esteemed that the emperor received initiation at the hands of the Magi who accompanied Tiridates on his visit to Rome.' Nevertheless Mithraism seems to have made only a very slight impression upon the coast lands of the eastern Mediterranean. Though the Persian reUgion is familiar to Greek and Roman writers,'' it apparently ' Plutarch, Pomp., 24. " Cumont, Textes, etc., I, igo. 3 PUny, Nat. Hist., xxx. 6; Cumont, Textes, etc., I, 239. "E.g., Herodotus, i. 131-40; Strabo, xv. 3. 13-20; Plutarch, De Iside et Osiride, 46 f.; Diogenes Laertius, Proem, vi, where older author ities are cited. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 315 was not among the religious phenomena with which they came nito daily contact. Furthermore, the absence of Mithraeums in the archaeological remains of the eastern Mediterranean is usually taken as evi dence that Persian religion was not influential in this territory. But this lack of positive data may easily be overemphasized. It is still possible that Mithraic forces may have been felt more widely than the present data would seem to indicate. A new mystery-reUgion might not estabUsh a distinctive existence in territory already pre-empted by several similar types of faith, and yet it might be present, coalescing with them and con tributing in turn some items in their development. It doubtless was a characteristic of Mithraism in earUer times — as we know it was later — to associate itself with other faiths, at the same time contributing to their life not a little of its own leaven. This process certainly had been going on in the lands about the northeastern Mediterranean long before Christianity arose, although we may not at present be able to define the exact Umits of Mithraic activity within the religious life of that region. - '"" - fOti the other hand, the wide dissemination of Egyp- . tian mystery-reUgion over the Graeco-Roman world in pre-Christian times is amply attested.' Isis ajnd- ' Besides thegeneral works on -Egyptian reUgion (see above, p. 76), special treatments bf the present subject may be found in Lafaye, Histoire du culte des divinites d'Alexandrie Serapis, Isis, Harpocrate el Anubis hors de I'Egypte (Paris, 1883); De Jong, De Apuleio isiacorum mysteriorum (Leiden, 1900); Schafer, Die Mysterien des Osiris in Abydos unter K'dnig Sesostris III (Leipzig, 1904) ; Dennis, The Burden of Isis, Being the Laments of Isis and Nephtys Translated from the Egyptian (London, 1910); Burel, Isis et Isiaques sous I'empire romain (Paris, 3i6 The Evolution of Early Christianity ._„ Osiris, and later Serapis, are the chief deities..3vho figure in the Egj^tian mysteries. N Isis and Osiris were very ancient deities with whom the attainment of immortal blessedness had been associated from an early date. Herodotus' noted that these divinities occupied a unique position, in that all the Egyptians worshiped them in the same way, while the worship of other gods varied. Herodotus is impressed with the substantially uniform position which Isis and Osiris hold in the popular faith. Serapis appears prominently first in the Ptolemaic period, when his worship became an official cult. The ancestry of Serapis is very obscure,' but he is practicaUy 191 1) ; Moret, Rois et dieux d'Egypte, and Mysteres egyptiens (Paris, 191 1) ; Weber, Drei Unter suchungen zur dgyptisch-griechischen ReUgion (Heidel berg, 1911); Boulage, Les mysteres d'Isis el d'Osiris (Paris, 1912); Reisner, The Egyptian Conception of Immortality (London, 1912); Frazer, Adonis, Attis, Osiris, pp. 267-400; Cumont, Oriental ReUgions, pp. 73-102; DiU, Roman Society from Nere to Marcus AureUus, pp. 560- 84; Toutain, Les cultes paiens, 1, ii, 5-34; Gruppe, Griechische Mytho logie, pp. 1562-82; Wissowa, Religion und Kultus der RSmer, pp. 351-59; Schmidt, Kultiibertragungen, pp. 47-81; Uvy, "Sarapis," Revue de I'his toire des reUgions, LX (1909), 285-98; LXI (1910), 162-96; LXIII (1911), 125-47; Sethe, "Sarapis und die sogenannten xiroxoi des Sarapis: Zwei Probleme der griechisch-aegyptischen Religionsge schichte," Abhandlungen der K'dniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu GSttingen (Philologisch-historisch Klasse, Neue Folge XIV, Nr. 5, Berlin, 1913); Loisy, "Isis et Osiris," Revue d'histoire et de littirature religieuses, Nouvelle s6rie, IV (1913), 385-421. ¦ ii. 42. " Cf. Cumont. Oriental Religions,- pp. 74 f., 229, notes i and 4. According to Plutarch {De Iside et Osiride, 28), Ptolemy I was instructed in a dream to transfer the colossus of Pluto at Sinope to Alexandria where it was named Serapis, the name being derived in popular tradi tion from Osiris-Apis. This derivation has recently been defended by Sethe {op. cit.), who maintains that the Greeks mistook the O in Osiris for the article and made "Serapis" from the rest of the compound word. But no explanation yet offered can be treated as final. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 317 identical with Osiris, the two names being perpetuated side by side. The story of Osiris' death and resurrection has many variations, but the central elements of the myth agree. Osiris upoh earth had been a king of Egypt, bestowing the gifts of civilization upon mankind.' He suffered a violent death and Isis in fierce grief sought him until she recovered the body, which was carefully embalmed.' Another tradition told of the dismember ment of the body, the parts being recovered by Isis and the whole restored to life.' Osiris then became king of the nether world. Under astral influence his dominion was transferred to the Plains of Aalu in the west where the sun sank out of sight, absorbed in the death of night. ___^ - _ /'riiils^siris was the prototype of the virtuous man (who sought from reUgion the assurance of admission /intoJh£_abod€-Qf the-blest after death, The road to be traversed by thedeparted soul was a difficult and danger ous one, consequently formulas were provided for use in warding off demons and procuring divine help. The so-called ^^"^ (if tfl' ^^enrt owes its origin to this demand, already in full force during the period from the Eight eenth to the Twentieth dynasties. If the traveler, on reaching the judgment hall of Osiris, received a favorable verdict, he was permitted to enter the Plain of Aalu wherejie might lead fprever a Ufe of eternal happi ness. The~15eUever identified his own" career so closely" with' that of Osiris that the soul of a dead man was actually called "Osiris," and those who gained ' Plutarch, op. cit., 13. " Herodotus, n. 86. 3 Plutarch, op. cit., 18. 3i8 The Evolution of Early Christianity admission to the Plain of Aalu could even become gods if they so desired.'^_____,,_ Naturally the deities were highly praised for provid ing mankind with a cultus capable of conferring on humanity these immortal blessings. The feelings of appreciation and reverence aroused by contemplating the experiences of Isis and Osiris in their struggle against their enemy Typhon, who had brought about Osiris' death, is tersely expressed in the words of Plutarch: "But the avenger of Osiris, his sister and wife, Isis, who extinguished and put a stop to the madness and fury of Typhon, did not forget the contests and struggles she had gone through, nor yet her own wanderings, nor did she suffer oblivion and silence to envelop her many deeds of wisdom, many feats of courage, but by intermingling with the most sacred ceremonies, images, hints, and representations of her sufferings of yore, she consecrated at one and the same time both lessons of piety and consolation in suffering for men and women when over taken by misfortune. And she, together with Osiris, having been translated from the rank of good divinities up to that of gods, by means of their virtue (as later was done with Hercules and Bacchus) receive not inappropriately the united honors of gods and of divini ties everjrwhere, both in the regions above the earth, and in those under ground, possessing the supreme power.'" In the time of Herodotus' the second most important Egyptian festival was in honor of Isis. Her largest ' See in general, on this subject, Wiedemann, The Realms of the Egyptian Dead (London, 1901). " Plutarch, op. cit., 27. Cf. the similar language of Paul in explain ing Jesus' exaltation to heavenly honors (Phil. 2:5-10). 3 vu. 59-61. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 319 temple was in the city of Busiris in the middle of the Delta. In connection with the festival held at this place "aU the men and women to the number of many myriads beat themselves after the sacrifice" in memory of the goddess ' lamentation for the dead Osiris. Herodo tus doubtless could have informed us accurately about the details of the ritual had he not been so reverential toward their secrets,' nevertheless he does disclose their general character.' The death of Osiris was widely lamented; and the adventures of the dying and rising god were depicted before the eyes of the neophytes in the form of a mystery-play. These ceremonies will, of course, have been accompanied by fitting ritualistic observances and an appropriate interpretation of their significance. The Egyptian mysteries spread extensively over the Mediterranean world from the beginning of the third century B.C. on. During the rule of Ptolemy I the worship of Isis and Serapis was estabUshed at Athens, the latter having a temple at the foot of the Acropolis. In fact, the worship of these Egyptian deities had been a famiUar phenomenon in almost the entire territory about the Levant for three centuries before the rise of Chris tianity. The same deities had also traveled to Rome before the begiiming of our era. The cult of Serapis was estabUshed in PozzuoU by the year 105 B.C., when a Serapeum is mentioned in a city ordinance. TibuUus' fiancee, DeUa, had been initiated into the mysteries of Isis at Rome, and he appeals to Delia to intercede ' See above, p. 291. " See especiaUy u. 170 f. Plutarch's De Iside et Osiride and Apuleius' Metamorphoses are important additional sources of information. 320 The Evolution of Early Christianity with the goddess for him as he now Ues sick in Corcyra.' At this early date the Egyptian mysteries had pushed their way into Italy despite the opposition — due in some measure perhaps to Rome's jealousy of Alex andria — which was raised against them. They antici pated Christianity in incurring persecution, records of which are preserved for the years 59, 53, 50, 48 B.C. and 19 A.D. ; yet, like Christianity a century or more later, they seemed only to thrive the better for oppo sition. The significance of these mysteries for the people of the Graeco-Roman world seems to have been in funda mental respects much the same as that of the correspond ing Greek, Phrygian, or Syrian cults. Here again we find a mother-goddess personifying the source of life' and civilization, and associated with her is a consort who impersonates the hope of triumph in the ever- present human struggle of life over death. Diodorus in his History" gives a description of Isis said to have been derived from a tomb inscription at Nysa in Arabia. Apart from the question of the tradition's historicity, the sentiments expressed, which are repeated in fuller form in an inscription of Ios,' probably represent the popular conception of Isis' functions as conceived by hosts of persons in the first century B.C. The goddess proclaims herself to be the queen of every land, equipped with divine knowledge to ordain binding decrees. She has designed the arts of civiUzation; she taught men mys teries, thus founding religion; government and social ' TibuUus, i. 3. " i. 27. 3 Text and translation in Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East, pp. 136 f. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 321 order are her gifts; she is the patroness of Ufe both in nature and in mankind; to Egjrpt which nourished her she is a perpetual honor. Plutarch, a Greek interpreter of the Isis-Osiris religion, writing at approximately the same period when the author of the Fourth Gospel interpreted Christianity to the Greeks, follows a more philosophical vein, though he does not deviate materially from the popular faith. He admits that the mourning for Osiris and the rejoicing at his resurrection are symbols of the death and revival of nature, but he also sees back of these outward phenom ena something else — shall we say something cosmic and "spiritual"? He calls Isis "the female principle of nature and that which is capable of receiving all generation in virtue of which she is styled by Plato 'nurse' and 'all-receiving,' but by people in general she is called the ' one of numberless names ' because she is converted by the Logos [that is, Osiris, who is identi fied with the Logos, the Word] into, and receives, all appearances and forms." Osiris in his Logos-function, according to Plutarch, brought the rational world into being.' Perhaps Plutarch was the first to expound the signifi cance of Isis and Osiris in these particular terms, though that is by no means certain. But for genera tions devotees of these gods had been observing the sacred ceremonies of the cult, nourishing piety upon, and deriving consolation from, the memory of these deities' sufferings, and worshiping them with hearts more or less full of appreciation and reverence according to the capacity of the worshiper. An interpretation of 'See Plutarch, ep. cit., 39, 53 f., and 61. 32 2 The Evolution of Early Christianity this religion by a truly mystic spirit has been preserved in Apuleius' Metamorphoses. Though the document is from the latter half of the second century a.d., it has the same basal conception of the goddess that appears in Diodorus two hundred years before and in Plutarch midway between these limits. Isis addresses Lucius, who is seeking her favor, in the usual way: "Behold me Lucius, moved by thy prayers I appear to thee, I, who am nature, the parent of all things, the mistress of all the elements, the primordial offspring of time, the supreme among divinities, the queen of departed spirits, the first of the celestials, and the uniform manifestations of gods and goddesses." The response of the devout soul to this much-revered goddess — a response which may have been made by many a worshiper in his heart long before Apuleius put it into the mouth of Lucius — was naturally one of great appre- ciativeness and strong reUgious fervor. After the god dess had received him into full fellowship through the rites of initiation, Lucius uttered a prayer, worthy to stand beside Cleanthes' great hymn to Zeus. In the latter the philosopher speaks forth his reverence for the activities of a divine Providence which man beholds with satisfaction; in the prayer to Isis the mystic soul appreciates none the less the god's activities, but it finds the great reaUty of reUgion in the inward certainty of union with the deity. Lucius prays: "Thou, O holy and perpetual preserver of the human race, always munificent in cherishing mortals, dost bestow the sweet affection of a mother on the misfortunes of the wretched. Nor is there any day or night, nor so much as the minutest particle of time, which passes unattended by Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 323 thy bounties. Thou dost protect men both by sea and land, and, dispersing the storms of Ufe, dost extend thy health-giving right hand, by which thou dost unravel the inextricably entangled threads of the Fates, and dost assuage the tempests of fortune and restrain the maUgnant influences of the stars. The gods of heaven adore thee, thou dost roll the sphere of the universe round the steady poles, thou dost iUuminate the sun, thou dost govern the universe, thou dost tread the realms of Tartarus. The stars move responsive to thy com mand, the gods rejoice in thy divinity, the seasons return by thy appointment, and the elements are thy servants. At thy nod the breezes blow, the clouds are nurtured, the seeds germinate, and the blossoms increase. The birds as they hover through the air, the wild beasts as they roam on the mountains, the serpents that hide in the earth, and the monsters that swim in the sea are terrified at the majesty of thy presence. But I so weak in capacity for celebrating thy praises, and possessing such slender means for offering sacrifices, have far from eloquence sufficient to express all that I conceive of thy majesty. Not a thousand mouths, and tongues as many, not an etemal flow of unwearied speech would be equal to the task. I will, therefore, use my utmost endeavors to do what, poor as I am, stiU one truly reU gious may do — I wiU figure to myself thy divine counte nance and wiU even preserve this most holy divinity locked up in the deepest recesses of my breast."' The mysteries in general perpetuate a very ancient type of reUgious activity.', In the first instance they -represent primitive man's effort to avail himself of the -_ ' Ap\Aeius,-Metamorphoses,xi. 25. 324 The Evolution of Early Christianity help of nature's forces. His main interest is to persuade these powers to act favorably in his behalf. -, It would be fatal for his welfare if vegetation should fail to revive in the springtime, if the fields should refuse to yield their increase, or if he were denied descendants to defend and perpetuate the existence of the tribe. So he institutes rites designed to bring about the return of spring, the fertiUty of the soil, and the propagation of the race. His one fear is that life may fail, and his one desire is to insure himself against such disaster. In this lies the explanation of those crude features of nature- worship, the prevalence of phalUc images, and the like, which were present in almost all the mysteries. At an early stage of development man attained con fidence in the power of nature to survive the shock of winter's death. He did not base his assurance on the uniformity of nature's law, as we do, but such uniformity was practically as substantial a thing for his faith as that dogma is for our science. This faith was personi fied in the form of a dying and reviving god, which was the ancient way of talking about what we term the succession of the seasons. The young deity died and the mother-goddess, source of all Ufe, lamenting his decease, refused to sustain Ufe until he was restored. Thus summer followed winter, and winter, summer. In Hellenistic times this type of reUgion still made a strong appeal, although it had taken a new turn. Not crops and herds and social groups, but the welfare of the individual soul was now uppermost. Men looked to the deity which formerly guaranteed the perpetuity of nature's life to give the individual a similar assurance. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 325 /xfius a god which existed first as a redeemer of vegeta- L tion became a redeemer of souls. , As in earUer Times man sought to ally himself with the forces of nature in order to obtain their aid, so now his aim was to unite himself to this savior-deity. To accompUsh this end various means were employed, including pictorial representations of the redeemer- deity's career, rites of purification by which one became worthy of approaching the god, or other ceremonies designed to effect union between the believer and the worshiper. Some of these rites were crude survivals from the earUer stage of nature-worship, while others breathed a noble spirit of purity and devotion. In any case, the religious impulses were fundamentally the same, although the methods employed for attaining the com mon goal naturally varied with the education and per sonaUty of the worshiper. One of the most influential factors in the evolution of the mystery-religions was the introduction of astral ideas. Originally the gods of these cults seem, for the most part at least, to have been chthonian deities, and the abode of the blest was also located beneath the earth. When the gods were transferred to the heavens and when the soul of man was given astral connections, these religions had a new and much more effective instrument for use in their special task of insuring man the help of the deity in the attain ment of a blessed immortaUty. This process of de velopment must have begun at a comparatively early date, for it was already in fuU bloom before the ojiening of our era.' ' See above, p. 244. 326 The Evolution of Early Christianity The reaUstic features of the mystery-religions were still preserved, notwithstanding this transition of thought from earth to heaven. With the advancement of civili zation the crude rites which had formerly been employed to symboUze or to effect union with the god were con siderably modified, but this union was not conceived to be any less real. The devotee and the deity were stUl reaUstically united, although the consciousness of the divine presence might now be expressed in terms of intellectual rather than physical emotions. This intellectuaUzing tendency, which had been prompted by astrology and which was stimulated by the develop ment of a world-culture in Hellenistic times, led to a greater emphasis than formerly upon speculative items resulting in a more elaborate mystery-religion theology. The tendency toward mystical speculation has already been observed, even among Greek philosophers,' but it came to fullest expression in connection with the oriental reUgions. The movement did not at first produce an extensive formal literature, and such as was produced has not been preserved from earlier times. Its real spirit is at present best reflected in the writings of the Gnostics, in the Hermetic Uterature, and in the magical papyri. The actual ancestry of Gnosticism is now understood to be pre-Christian oriental mysticism, though it is difficult to determine with which oriental religions its genetic kinship is closest.' In fact, the movement itself ' Cf. above, p. 28iff. " Its oriental origin has graduaUy gained in recognition since the appearance of Anz's Zur Frage nach dem Ursprung des Gnosticismus (Texte und Untersuchungen, XV, 4, Leipzig, 1897;, who traces its ances- Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 327 is a syncretism embodying elements from various sources. But its fundamental interest is the same as that of all the mystery-reUgions, namely, to procure salvation for the individual soul through the help of divinity. On this practical religious basis it rears its speculative superstructure. The world of matter and the world of spirit are two distinct entities. The soul of man is a spark of heavenly fire belonging to the divine sphere, but has become so entangled in matter that release is impossible without divine aid. This aid is mediated in the form of revealed knowledge, gnosis {yvuffLs), which is a mysterious wisdom attained only by those who have been initiated.' Through this divine enlightenment the soul now attains liberation, try to Babylonia. Bousset, Hauptprobleme der Gnosis (Gottingen, 1907), on the other hand, derives the main constituent elements from Persia. An Egyptian origin is aiSrmed by Amelineau, Essai sur le gnosticisme igyptien (Paris, 1887), and the same view has been advocated more recently by Reitzenstein, Poimandres (Leipzig, 1904) and Die helknistischen Mysterienreligionen (Leipzig, 1910'). The latest writer, De Faye, Gnostiques et gnosticisme (Paris, 1913), does not believe it possible to construct the genealogical tree of Gnosticism so far as to discover any one primitive type (p. 447). Other works on Gnosticism are F. C. Baur, Das mankhdische Religienssystem (Tiibingen, 1831) and Die christUche Gnosis (Tiibingen, 1835); Lipsius, Der Gnosticismus (Leipzig, i860); Mansel, The Gnostic Heresies of the First and Second Centuries (London, 1875); Hilgenfeld, Ketzergeschichte des Urchriskn- tums (Leipzig, 1884); King, The Gnostics and Their Remains (London, 1887"); M. Friedlander, Der vorchristUche jiidische Gnosticismus (Got tingen, 1898); G. R. S. Mead, Fragments ef a Faith Forgotten (London, 1900); De Faye, Introduction a I'Uiide du gnosticisme (Paris, 1903); Buonaiuti, Le Gnosticismo (Rome, 1907); Schultz, Dekumente der Gnosis (Jena, 1910); Pfleiderer, Das Urchristentum (BerUn, 1902"), II, i-i7g,Enslishti.,PrimitiveChristianity (New York, i9io),III, 113-271; Wendland, Die hellenistisch-r'omische Kultur, pp. 163-87; Bousset, Kyrios Christos, pp. 222-63. ' Cf. Liechtenhan, Die Ofenbarung in Gnosticismus (Gottingen, 1901). 328 The Evolution of Early Christianity at the same time learning the secret of a successful journey to the abode of the blest after death. This abode is in the highest heavens, whither the soul joumeys equipped with all necessary armor, both offensive and defensive, for triumphing over its foes. This victory is made possible in the first instance through the work of a savior who, instead of being a concrete historical or mythical individual, is now an abstraction in the form of "light," "truth," "wisdom," "primal man," and the like. The whole scheme of the universe becomes a mighty drama of redemption. This in general was the character of Gnosticism before it was fused with Christianity in the second and third centuries a.d. The Hermetic literature, though not pre-Christian in its present form, represents Egyptian Gnosticism, elements of which are undoubtedly pre-Christian in origin.' These pertain to the welfare of the soul in its struggle to attain salvation through alliance with the deity who reveals true wisdom to the initiate. Thus the believer is reborn to a new life,' the god dwelUng in him and conferring upon him the gift of immortaUty. The conversation between Hermes and his son Thot' regarding regeneration reveals the characteristics of 'For Uterature see above, p. 193, n. 1. Jacoby, Die antiken Mys terienreligionen und das Chriskntum, pp. 30 ff., translates some of the more interesting passages. Reitzenstein, Poimandres, pp. 328 ff. prints a portion of the original text, the latest edition of which is Parthey, Hermetis Trismegisti Poemander (BerUn, 1854). Mead, Thrice Greatest Hermes, contains a translation, introduction, and commentary on the entire Hermetic corpus. "Or "Tat"; cf. Reitzenstein, op. cit., p. 117, n. 2. Hellenistic Religions of Redemption 329 the reUgion.' The father has received the divine enlight enment, and as he taUcs with the son the latter, too, experiences the change when he learns the secrets of wisdom from his father. Man's great misfortune is ignorance of God, but one who comes to a knowledge of the truth has the power and presence of deity within his breast. Essentially the same atmosphere pervades numerous magical papyri. To cite a single illustration from the prayer of a suppliant in the so-called "Mithra- Uturgy":' "If indeed it seems good to you permit me, now held down by my lower nature, to be reborn to immortaUty .... that I may become mentaUy reborn, that I may become initiated, that the Holy Spirit may breathe in me."' Such, in broad outlines, were the redemption-religions of the Graeco-Roman world. In details they exhibit varying characteristics, but they aU alike seek to meet the widespread demand for an individual salvation to be procured primarily by the aid of the deity. The demand for this type of religion was particularly strong in HeUenistic times, when national ideals were disap pearing and the individual was thrown more specifically upon his own resources in a vast and varied world. The human spirit, conscious of its frailty and helpless at the ' See text in Reitzenstein's Poimandres, pp. 339 ff. "There is much doubt about this document's being a Mithraic Uturgy (see Dieterich, MithrasUturgie, pp. 225-28, for a summary of the discussion) but it represents a type of reUgion widely prevalent in the ancient world. Although these documents are of post-Christian origin, many of the religious items in them are directly descended from the oriental mystery-reUgions. 3 Dieterich, MithrasUturgie, p. 4. 330 The Evolution of Early Christianity loss of older sanctions, eagerly turned toward those cults which offered a personal salvation based upon a divine redemptive transaction. Among the oriental reUgions of redemption which attempted to meet this situation, Christianity was the last to arise, but it ulti mately triumphed over all its rivals. We have, finally, to sketch briefly the beginnings of this triumph. CHAPTER X THE TRIUMPH OF CHRISTIANITY Christians in the first century passed through widely varying experiences, due in large measure to a rapidly changing environment. Jesus' death left his more imme diate followers disappointed and bewildered. They had hoped that he would lead them in triumph against the foreign oppressor, but instead he had been crushed by the might of Rome. The favor of God which they thought he enjoyed had been removed; it seemed to them now that he had been abandoned to die on the cross like a common thief. The disciples escaped being seriously involved in the trouble which cost Jesus his life. He apparently was condemned as a possible messianic agitator, his removal being mainly a precautionary measure, since he had not actively instigated any revolutionary political movement. Indeed, his followers were so few that the authorities took little notice of them after their leader had been removed. It was some time before they were sufficiently numerous or influential to attract attention, but even then hostility against them was prompted by entirely new causes. The persecution of the early Christian community in Jerusalem was not any mere continuation of the enmity which had brought about Jesus' death. Although the disciples had abandoned Jesus on the cross, their lives were still dominated by memories of personal association with him. He, like John the Baptist and many an older prophet, had proclaimed 331 332 The tLvoiution oj nariy cnrtsnanuy God's displeasure with contemporary religious condi tions among the Jews. But unlike John, he sought to communicate with men in the daily walks of life instead of calling them to hear the ascetic preacher of the desert. While in sympathy with John, Jesus was not fully satis fied with the latter's message. The call to repentance he doubtless approved, as well as the idea of impend ing judgment, but the constructive side of John's teaching did not adequately represent the experi ence of Jesus who thought of God not only as a future righteous judge but also as a heavenly father to be found here and now by all who seek him in a truly worshipful spirit. Jesus' unique capacity for spiritual communion with the Father suggests the measure of that pecuUarly strong attachment by which his closest associates were bound to him. They had been disposed to identify him with the long-expected one who should arise to deUver Israel from the yoke of the foreigner. Probably Jesus had not encouraged them in this specific belief, for he seems to have discountenanced current incUnations toward revo lution. At any rate, early Christian tradition generally affirms that previous to his death the disciples, in so far as they associated any idea of messiahship with him, entertained an entirely different conception from that which they came to hold subsequently. While his death shattered their poUtical aspirations, it still left them their vivid recollections of his personaUty on the basis of which they reared a new messianic faith. They no longer looked for an earthly leader, but for a heaven sent deliverer in the person of the crucified Jesus. Out of the "Jesus of history" enthroned in their memory The Triumph of Christianity 333 they proceeded to construct the "Christ of faith" who became central in their hope. There were various forces at work in their life tending to bring about the transformation of their faith. In the first place they cherished a great longing for a traditional redemption. This hope, stimulated by the Jews' long period of bitter experience under subjection to foreign rulers, became a central item in the national reUgion. All were agreed that ultimately God was to be the deUverer of his people, but there were differences of opinion about the program he would follow. The oldest view was to the effect that a natural diescendant of David would be elevated to the kingship, but in the interim between the Old and the New Testament another interpretation had arisen. According to this view God would send a deliverer out of heaven, miraculously bring ing all earthly rule to an end and establishing an eternal kingdom of righteousness. Although Jesus' death com pelled the disciples to abandon their beUef in him as . the man-Messiah, they still could resort to the concep tion of a heaven-Messiah. The transition became complete the moment beUef in Jesus' resurrection and exaltation to heaven was estabUshed. It is a common opinion nowadays that Jesus had attached to himself the notion of a heavenly Messiah and had cautiously endeavored to induct the disciples into his way of thinking. If he did make this attempt he was wholly unsuccessful in accompUshing his purpose, according to the uniform testimony of s3moptic tradition. Even Peter, when at last he confessed beUef in Jesus' messiahship, immediately betrayed utter igno rance of the type of messiahship which beUevers later 334 The Evolution of Early Christianity attached to Jesus. They admitted that prior to his death they had not comprehended his meaning which had now become clear to them in the light of further developments. Had Jesus himself anticipated the future course of events ? Naturally they beUeved he had, and so they recalled words of his which were thought to point in this direction. But to what extent their interpreta tion was influenced by their subsequent faith is now Very difficult to determine. One thing, however, is clear: the disciples did not carry away from Calvary any ready-made expectation of seeing Jesus aUve again. Although they later beUeved that he had tried to pre pare them for what was to happen, they freely confessed to a former dulness which had made comprehension impossible.' The most important preparatory items ' in the attainment of the disciples' resurrection faith were their memory of Jesus' personality, and the apocalyptic form of the national hope to which they now naturally turned. Then of a sudden certain members of their company had a revolutionary experience; they believed Jesus had appeared to them in angelic form, thus prov ing that he had broken through the gates of Hades and ascended to heaven. He was how in a "position to discharge- the functions of the apocalyptic Messiah. May we suppose that the early beUevers were influ enced in the attainment of their resurrection faith by the notion of a dying and rising god as current in the, contemporary mystery-religions ? \ This is not an a priori impossibility. That such influence may have been felt even within Jewish circles is suggested by Ezek. 8:14, 'See Mark 8:30-32; 9:9 f., 30-32; 10:32-34; Matt. 16:20 f. 17:9, 22 f.; 20:17-19; Luke 9:21 f., 36; 9:43-45; 18:31-34. The Triumph of Christianity 335 and its possibiUty for the Christians is aU the stronger when we remember that they had probably belonged originally to the populace. It is not unlikely that popu lar reUgion, even among the Jews of Palestine, had absorbed features from the popular faiths of their neigh bors, notwithstanding the hostiUty which official Judaism may have felt toward these exotic features. On the other hand, the fundamental motive behind the disciples' faith is so genuinely Jewish that the idea of gentile connections in the first instance seems very questionable. The earliest Christians were not, like the devotees of the mystery-religions, paying reverence to a deity because he, by his triumph over death, was thought capable of assuring^ ...them a similar victory. ' Jesiis^ resurrection was only indirectly beneficial to them; its immediate worth was for Jesus in that it elevated him to the position of Messiah. fTKelnenibers of the early com munity were h6t~~e2^.cting to die but to Uve to see Jesus come in glory upon the clouds. His resurrection received its primary signfficance from the fact that it made this action possible. Paul, so far as we know, was the first to affirm that Jesus is the first-fruits and that those who are united to him by faith triumph over death because of his victory. Thus Paul took advantage of a notion with which the Corinthians were already familiar. Similar influences probably had been at work in the development of tra dition as we now find it in the elaborated accounts of Jesus' resurrection given in the Gospels. Since these narratives in the present literary form have probably all done service in the propagation of the new reUgion on gentile soil, the evangelists may have designed them to 336 The Evolution of Early Christianity ^ show that Jesus guaranteed immortal life as truly as did the dying and rising Attis, Adonis, or Osiris.' The specific conditions under which the first disciples found themselves after they came to beUeve in Jesus' resurrection and exaltation determined the main Unes of their future activity. The early community seems to have been composed, at the outset, of Palestinian Jews only who had no thought of breaking with their ancestral religion. The distinctive thing about them was their '.conviction that they had at last obtained the correct /answer to that age-long question of the Jewish nation, •namely, when will Yahweh effect the salvation of his 'chosen people? Their answer was a very simple one. It was based upon the conviction that Jesus had been raised from the dead and exalted to heaven whence he would come suddenly and soon to bring an end to the present order of things, miraculously estabUshing a new age where Israel would be supreme. There would be no more oppression from the Romans, no more desecra tion of the holy city by the foreign soldiers, no more tribute money paid to the heathen overlords, no more suffering for the people of God, and no longer would any evil thing be found in all the earth. The notions of later times to the effect that this ideal was to be realized in a place called heaven whither each soul went at death, while the order of things on this planet moved on in normal fashion, was no part of the earliest Christians' thinking. They were not going to heaven; heaven was coming to them. They looked for a new Jerusalem to be let down out of heaven upon a ' Cf . Pfleiderer, Early Christian Conception of Christ, pp. 84 ff ., and Bruckner, Der sterbende und auferstehende Gottheiland, pp. 34 ff. The Triumph of Christianity 337 renovated earth, and they expected to live to see that event come to pass. Even when the Gospel of Mark was written, presumably about the year 70 a.d., it was be Ueved that certain persons who had been present with Jesus upon the earth would live to see the new kingdom established.' Thus redemption for God's chosen people was on the verge of realization. How was this impending redemption to be accom pUshed ? The first disciples seem to have answered this question simply by referring to the future advent of Jesus and demanding belief in his messiahship. There is really no justification for suspecting that they at the start had any suspicion of a break with Judaism or that they felt Jesus' death had accomplished anything other than his own transition from the status of a possible man-Messiah to the position of the actual heavenly Messiah. The Pauline argument about deUverance from the bondage of the law — a phase of thought which the apostle worked out so strongly in his practical con flict with the legalists — had not yet arisen to mar the disciples' sense of unity with Jewish coreligionists. In fact, they did not regard the law as a burden from which men needed redemption. It was for them rather a favor which Yahweh had bestowed upon his people, something on which they probably delighted to meditate day and night. The great redemptive transaction was still to be accomplished through Jesus' return, but its consumma tion was thought to await the assembUng of a proper body of inhabitants for the new kingdom. These were to be gathered from the chosen people of God, who were ' Mark 9:1. 338 The Evolution of Early Christianity to enter into this new privilege by repenting of their sins and especially of their apathy or hostility toward those who were proclaiming that God had chosen Jesus to usher in the new messianic age. Apart from this requirement the Jews were to continue as before in the strict observance of the laws of Moses as a part of their general purpose to please God and so to induce his interference on their behalf. In so far as further requirements were imposed on believers, these seem to have consisted in an enlarge ment of the current stock of ethical and reUgious teaching by adding items from the teaching of Jesus. His dis ciples defended this innovation byjdentifying him with the prophet whose coming Moses had foretold: "A prophet shall the Lord God raise up unto you from among your brethren, Uke unto me; to him shall ye hearken in all things whatsoever he shall speak unto you.'" Jesus while upon earth was simply the servant of God sent to bless the people in turning them away from their sins. The disciples preached a simUar message of repentance in order to persuade God to send Jesus who had been made Messiah through his resurrection and exaltation. According to this program the distinctively redeem ing activity of Jesus stiU awaits fulfilment. His career upon earth was a preliminary period of teaching designed to prepare the people for the final deliverance when Jesus would appear as Messiah coming upon the clouds. Not tiU then would the powers of darkness be set at naught and the people of God enter into the heritage of the redeemed. Although Jesus would be the national • Acts 3:22. The Triumph of Christianity 339 deliverer of Israel, the national group was narrowed to include only those who were wilUng to beUeve that he had been raised from the dead, exalted to the right hand of God, and inducted into the messianic office. Those who held this faith would receive the blessings of redemp tion when Jesus came upon the clouds to discharge his messianic functions in accomplishing the salvation of Israel. Thus Christianity at the outset was a nationalistic ; religion of redemption, distinctively Jewish in type.^ The figure of the redeemer, the notion of his special functions, and the definition of man's part in the pro gram were all emphatically Jewish in character. The original items contributed by the disciples were their identification of the heavenly savior with a well-known historical individual, and their accompanying belief in Jesus' resurrection. This was the gospel with which the early preachers hoped to win the Jews for the coming kingdom. Under the inspiration of belief in Jesus' exaltation to a position of lordship in the reahn of angelic beings, and having realized in their own lives an ecstatic experience which they interpreted as a special outpouring of the Holy Spirit, the first disciples began enthusiastically to preach their new faith. But they were far less success ful in winning the Jews than they doubtless had expected to be, with the result that they were ultimately forced to form a separate organization and to advocate a reUgion which they, to be sure, called the true Judaism but which their enemies regarded as a heresy to be vigorously persecuted. If some among their number had not con ceived the idea of evangelizing the Gentiles, and had not 1 340 The Evolution of Early Christianity stated the new religion in such form as to make it inteUi gible and acceptable to foreigners, it is doubtful whether the new movement would have been able to perpetuate its existence beyond the second or third generation. The story of Christianity's early triumph is closely bound up with these rapidly changing experiences through which the early believers passed. They began to develop distinctive traits as soon as they undertook the work of evangelization. From the start, apparently, they employed baptism as a purificatory rite in much the same way that John the Baptist had done. Although they were foUowing Jewish precedent, for baptism was already practiced by Jews,' they gave it a somewhat new meaning by connecting it directly with faith in Jesus as the coming Messiah. Although they observed the stated forms of religious worship custoifiary among the Jews, their own peculiar interest naturally drew them together in a group apart where their own distinctive experiences were given free expression. There they prayed in the full vigor of their new enthusiasm, they ate together in loving feUowship, recalling their life of association with Jesus. They remembered especiaUy the last meal they had eaten with him and made of it a memorial feast which also prefigured the new messianic banquet to be celebrated when the kingdom came. The antecedents of the Christian meal may have been to some extent Jewish,' but it was destined to have its own ' See Brandt, Die jiidische Baptismen, oder das religiose Waschen und Baden im Judentum mit Einschluss des Judenchristentum (Giessen, 1910); Oesterley and Box, ReUgion and Worship of the Synagogue (New York, 1907), pp. 255-64; Schurer, Geschichte, usw.. Ill, 181-85. " Cf . Bertholet, Die jiidische Religion, pp. 317 f.; Bousset, Die Reli gion des Judentums, pp. 530 f.; Schiirer, Geschichte, usw., II, ^63 f., and III, 142 S.; Josephus, Ant., XIV, x, 8. The Triumph of Christianity 341 peculiar development in connection with the new religion. The first Christians' faith in the exalted Jesus, their consciousness of spiritual endowment, and the activities it prompted, the rites of baptism and the Lord's Supper, were some of the earliest distinctive features developed in connection with the new propaganda. These things not only furnished Christians a means of differentiating themselves from other Jews, but also supplied items which proved particularly serviceable when the missionaries attempted to make 'their faith minister to the religious needs of the Gentiles. Jesus was presented as the one imperial authority who could satisfy the craving of men for a national redemption, because his kingdom was other-worldly and so eternal.' Those Gentiles who were seeking an individual salvation through union with a deity who could confer upon them assurance of blessed immortaUty were offered the possi bility of union with the risen Jesus who alone had brought life and immortaUty to light. The attempt to know God through emotional experience, already so widespread among gentile faiths, could be met by Chris tians through their belief in spiritual endowment. Sacramental religious values were easily conserved by adding to or reinterpreting the rites of baptism and the Lord's Supper. The Gentiles' superstitious fears could' be quieted by emphasizing the superior power of the risen Jesus over all inferior spirit-beings. In all of these respects Christians advocated a redemptive reUgion which graduaUy lost its original national character in favor of individual, mystical forms. The process of expansion by which Christianity made conquest of the gentile world begins to appear clearly in 342 The Evolution of Early Christianity the work of Paul. While he was one with earlier Jewish Christians in advocating the nationalistic apocalyptic conception of Jesus' messiahship, there were certain respects in which he went his own way. One of the most conspicuous features of his independence is seen in his attitude toward ceremonial observances. Since he had persecuted the Christians before espousing their cause, it was impossible for him to be as oblivious as the first believers , had been to the necessity of a separation between Christianity and Judaism. He, accordingly, was not able to unite with them in advocating the keep ing of the law of Moses as the condition of Gentiles' admission into the coming kingdom. He agreed with his predecessors in beUeving that Jesus would come soon and perfect the work of salvation, yet he devised a relatively new program for the regulation of life in the meantime. In the first place he said, contrary to the views of the Palestinian Christians, that the age of legalism had passed away. He would no longer know either a Moses or a Jesus according to the flesh. We can hardly infer that he no longer admired the ethical standards of Moses or of Jesus, or that he did not recognize the authority of their words as teachers, for he cites -them both as a final court of appeal in certain matters. The thing of which he is confident is that the secret of preparing proper inhabitants for the new kingdom Ues not in the keeping of ordinances but in estabUshing a population of spirit- filled individuals. Before Paul, spiritual demonstration seems to have been viewed more as a luxury than a necessity among beUevers. He made the indweUing Spirit basal for Christian life, and in doing this he The Triumph of Christianity 343 equipped himself with a very important instrument for the propagation of the new movement among Gentiles who had become accustomed, in certain circles, to phrase religion in the language of an emotional experience of the indwelling divine power. The centrality of the Spirit is one of the clearest items in the reUgion of Paul. He uses a number of expressions emphasizing this idea. To be a Christian is simply to be a spiritual person, and to have the Spirit is just another way of saying that Christ dwells in one. A Christian without some measure of the Spirit is a contradiction in terms. As the ancients often said that a person pos sessed by an evil spirit was "in the demon," an expres sion which corresponds to our notion that the demon was in the person, so Paul in speaking of the believer's union with Christ says the believer is "in Christ," or "in the Lord." For Paul such terms meant the fusion of the divine with the human in realistic fashion. In this general sphere of divine activity there is no essential difference between Spirit of God, Spirit of Christ, Christ, or the Lord tabernacling in the beUever. It is not easy for moderns to comprehend Paul on this point. Our notion of the impenetrability of matter makes it almost impossible to think of Spirit in as realistic a way as the ancients did. Perhaps we can better understand their view by comparison with con temporary Stoic teaching. According to the Stoics man was a living being because he had Spirit {ivvevp,a) in him; - when Spirit withdrew man became an inert corpse. This thing caUed Spirit was itself corporeal, pervading and animating the body in much the same fashion that the blood was diffused through the system. But this 344 The Evolution of Early Christianity Spirit was also divinity, being a part of the great primal force, the divine essence, or God, out of which the world came and by which it was constantly sustained. Thus man from the day of his natural birth was divine, accord ing to Stoicism. Returning to Paul's conception, we find a similar reaUsm. But Paul is no Stoic in holding that the divine part dwells in man from birth, and that he can attain to salvation simply by reaUzing his inherent divine powers. Paul dpes not preach the doctrine of redemption by means of the natural man's living true to his best self. On the contrary, he affirmed the doctrine of a new divine insert. There was no hope of obtaining salvation until the natural man had been reinforced with the Spirit, until he had been recreated by the insertion of a new constituent element. The Christian was a new creature, to use Paul's language. He was a compound of the natural man and the divine Spirit — a Spirit-man, a Christ-man, a God-man; and this new element in his constitution was no mere vague impulse toward right eousness, no mere intangible creation of thought, but a specific quantitative reaUty. This conception was perfectly natural since it was just as difficult for most men in Paul's day to conceive of incorporeal spirit as it is difficult for men in our time to think of spirit as corporeal. If we dismiss, in imagination, our doctrine of the impene trability of matter, perhaps we shall be able to appre ciate better Paul's point of view. Union with Christ, the indwelling Spirit, meant the presence of a new constituent element in personality. Only those who were thus Spirit-fiUed could be partakers in the blessings of redemption. They were The Triumph of Christianity 345 already united with Christ and thus anticipated these blessings even before the final act of redemption had been accomplished through the destruction of aU evil powers on the day of judgment. The thing of first con sequence in the meantime, therefore, was to cultivate the Ufe of the Spirit and enlarge as much as possible the membership of the spiritual community. This was a very plain matter, and had Paul's previous religious training been in Stoicism or in the mystery-reUgions he could have carried out this program much more simply than he did. But he was too loyal to his Jewish religious heritage to be able to dismiss without further ado the faith of his fathers. Moreover, controversy with oppo nents and the adjustment of his own experience forced him to interpret history. One of his problems was how to handle that earlier divine revelation, the Mosaic law, upon which Judaism was founded. In solving this difficulty his thinking pro ceeded from two premises: first, the natural man can not meet the full requirements of this law, and, secondly, the spiritual man belongs to a new order of things, is a new creation, and so is no longer under the regime of law. Hence Paul could not affirm that the law was still binding and that the Spirit was given for the purpose of helping man to keep the law. On the contrary, the legal regime had come to an end. Yet it had in the first place been a divine enactment, and as such it must have served an essential function and must have terminated in a fitting climax. Its function had been to teach man, by giving him this unattainable standard of conduct, how wide and ever-widening the gap was between his weak, sinful self and the righteous Deity. How was this chasm to be 346 The Evolution of Early Christianity bridged ? That it had been bridged and that Paul now as a Christian had the presence of the Deity in his own life was the second main premise of his thinking as weU as the incontestable fact of his experience. 'He met this problem by affirming that Jesus' death had satisfied the demands of the law, redeeming man from its curse and opening up a new highway of communication between humanity and Deity. Had Paul not been so thoroughly Jewish before his conversion we may safely surmise that he never would have taken such^labMate_ pains to work out this phase of his doctrine^ Even as it Vas;' he'did not liveT)y'his theory of the atonement; he lived by the Spirit, by his union with Christ, and on this rested his hope of redemption. _,. ~ — —— I "One of the most impoftanTitems to which Paul gave his attention must therefore have been the question of how to establish and maintain union with Christ, the redeemer. How did one become united with Christ? Paul says it has pleased God to save the world through the foolishness of preaching. Furthermore, Paul'spreach- ing was concerned with a subject which seemed to Jews quite unintelligible, while to the philosophers of Greece, it was fooUshness. Now this subject which Paul expounded, to use his own language, was "Jesus the Messiah and him crucified," and in expounding this theme the preacher spoke God's wisdom in a mystery. This wisdom, like the kernel of all mystery-reUgioh teaching of the times, could be expounded only by one who had been initiated into the mystery, and so had received the Spirit which searcheth out the deep things of God. The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for these no one knoweth save the The Triumph of Christianity 347 Spirit of God. In other words, to understand the redemptive significance of Jesus' death one must be "perfect" (reXeios), a word which was applied to a person who had been initiated into the mysteries. Thus Paul tersely remarks, closing the discussion about his qualifications for expounding the wisdom of God, "we have the'mind of Christ." Why did Paul thus depict and expound the crucifixion drama? Why did he "placard" Jesus crucified before the eyes of his hearers, as he says he had done to the Galatians? Of course his object was to induce his audience to perform such action as would bring them into union with Christ and so make them sharers in the Christian redemption. The primary action demanded was the exercise of faith, which meant the acceptance of Jesus as the Savior-Deity, the belief that God raised him from the dead, and the consequent confession of his lordship: "If thou shalt confess with thy mouth Jesus as Lord and shalt believe in thine heart that God raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved." Such a pro cedure issued either directly or indirectly in the establish ment of union "with Christ through infilUng by the Spirit. Paul assumes that everybody will concede it to have been through the hearing of faith that Christians had received, or had made possible the reception of, the Spirit in the first instance. While "faith" is the primary act in bringing about union with Christ, just how far it carried one along the way to the ultimate goal is not clear. Certainly the rite of baptism by which one "put on Christ" had a place in the process by which one became a full-fledged "spiritual" person. Paul's remark to the Corinthians 348 The Evolution of Early Christianity about not being sent to baptize but to preach, when isolated from its context, may seem to be a depreciation of the rite. But if it is read in the Ught of the context the exact reverse is true. Paul is glad that he had himself not baptized many of the Corinthians, just because baptism was so very significant. To have been bap tized into the name of an individual made one belong to that individual, hence had Paul baptized any large number of the Corinthians they might the more plausi bly have claimed to be "of Paul" and so might really have had some justification for forming a distinctly Pauline party. But since all had been baptized in the name of Christ, there was no ground for schism. "Is Christ divided ?" Was Paul crucified for you ? or were ye baptized in the name of Paul?" Of course not! It was only Christ who had been crucified for them, it was into Christ's name only that they had all been bap tized, and so they were all one in Christ. For Paul baptism was universally observed by Christians, and was primarily significant because it effected or consummated the beUever's union with Christ: "For in one Spirit were we all baptized into one body, whether Jews or Greeks, whether bond or free; and were all made to drink of one Spirit." BeUevers took Christ into them as realistically as though they had drunk down the baptismal waters. The Lord's Supper was another rite having a similar import, since it was a means of maintaining and strength ening this union. It is, to be sure, commemorative of Jesus' suffering and so serves to refresh the believer's memory on the great mystery-drama which in the first instance had called forth his faith, but it also served The Triumph of Christianity 349 to strengthen his vital union with Christ. Paul is one with his contemporaries in believing that whoever ate at any deity's communion table thereby partook of the deity's substance, hence he warns Christians against taking part in any non-Christian meal. Since the other gods are all evil demons, a Christian who partakes at their table subjects himself to grave dangers. On the other hand, the Lord's Supper should be observed with great solemnity and perfect sobriety, otherwise the participant may fail to discern the sacred body of which he is partaking and so incur the divine condemnation. The Supper, as a memorial of Jesus' martyr-death, is a means of bringing freshly to mind the mystery-drama which Paul originally preached, but it also serves to strengthen substantially the realistic union which exists between the believer and Christ. In giving baptism and the Lord's Supper this sacra mental turn, Paul was pursuing a tendency already prevalent in the religious world of his day. In more primitive times rites of ablution' and eating' were given a crass magical significance, as when the worshipers of Dionysus devoured the sacred victim raw, believing that they were thereby actually eating the god. In the Graeco-Roman world of the first century a.d. these cruder notions had given place to ideas more refined but none the less sacramentally realistic. When sym boUc food took the place of the divine animal, and the form of the deity was accordingly "spirituaUzed," the ' See KroU, "Alte Taufgebrauche," Archiv fiir Religionswissenschaft, VIII, Beiheft (1905), 27-53; Gruppe, Griechische Mythologie, pp. 888 f.; Gunkel, Zum religionsgeschichtlichen Verstdndnis, usw., pp. 83 ff. " Gruppe, op. cit., pp. 731 ff.; Goguel, L'Eucharistie des origines d Justin Martyr (Paris, 1910), pp. 293-317. 350 The Evolution of Early Christianity union which the ordinance effected between the believer and his god was no less reaUstic — so far as the absorption of actually divine essence was concerned — than had been the case in earlier times. So with Paul the Spirit- Christ entity, the possession of which constitutes one a Christian, is made available for everyone on the funda mental condition of faith, is realized in experiential fulness on the occasion of baptism when the convert formaUy "puts on Christ," and is constantly renewed or strengthened through regular participation in the memorial celebration called the Lord's Supper.' ' Note the following typical passages in Paul: on baptism, Gal. 3:27; I Cor. i:i3ff.; 6:11; io:iff.; 12:13; 15:29; Rom. 6:3ff.; Col. 2:11 ff.; andon the Lord's Supper, I Cor. 10:14-22; 11:20-32. Among writers who find sacramental conceptions of one form or another in Paul the more recent are HeitmiiUer, Im Namen Jesus, Taufe und Abetidmahl bei Paulus, and Taufe und Abendmahl im Urchristentum; Windisch, Taufe und Siinde im dltesten Christentum bis auf Origines (Tubingen, 1908); Goguel, ep. cit., pp. 135-84; H. J. Holtzmann, Neukstamentliche Theologie (Tiibingen, 1911"), II, 191-209, and " SakramentUches im Neuen Testament," Archiv fiir Religionswissenschaft, VII (1904), 58-69; Gardner, The Religious Experience of St. Paul (New York, 1911), pp. 102-26; Lake, The Earlier Epistles of St. Paul, pp. 210-15, 383-91; see also along similar lines. Hatch, The Influence of Greek Ideas, etc., pp. 292- 309; Anrich, Das antike Mysterienwesen in seinem Einfluss auf das Christentum, pp. 253., 106 ff., 199 ff.; Pfleiderer, Early Christian Con ception of Christ, pp. 124-33; Reitzenstein, Poimandres, pp. 2195., and Die hellenistischen Mysterienreligionen, pp. 77 ff.; Dieterich, Eine MithrasUturgie, pp. 106 f., 176-79; Cumont, Mysteries ef Mithra, pp. 150-74; Loisy, "L'Initiation chretienne," Revue d'hiskire et de littirature ¦ religieuses, Nouvelle sMe, V (1914), 193-226. On the other hand, the sacramental element is in the main denied by Clemen, Religionsgeschicht liche Erklarung, usw., pp. 165-207 (EngUsh tr.. Primitive Christianity, pp. 212-66), and Der Einfluss der Mysterienreligionen, usw., pp. 30-59; Kennedy, St. Paul and the Mystery Religions, pp. 227-79; Teichmann, "Die Taufe bei Paulus," Zeitschrift fiir Theologie und Kirche, VI (1896) 3S7~72; von Dobschiitz, "Sakrament und Symbol im Urchristentum " .^Studien und Kritiken, LXXVIII (1905), 1-40. The Triumph of Christianity 351 Having attained to union with Christ, what were the consequences for the believer ? In the first place he anticipated the blessing of ultimate salvation by being permitted to live upon earth the same type of life which he was to share in much greater fulness when the work of redemption reached its climax in the day of judgment. The Christian, filled with the divine Spirit, in a meas ure Uved the divine Ufe even while on earth and to that extent salvation was a present reality. One was redeemed from the power of sinful desire and fleshly impulses by receiving into one's self the new divine increment, the Spirit, the presence of Christ, which strengthened and directed man in his struggle against evU. ^^ifhe manifestations of this redemption as realized 'In the present were twofold, one might say : outward and inward. One who is Spirit-fiUed thereby becomes a I divinely dynamic person, and so heals the sick, works miracles, prophesies, discerns spirits, speaks with I tongues, and interprets tongues. In fact, the beUever's whole life is an outward manifestation of this new divine power which has become resident in him through his , union with Christ. ,- ' ^ _~: ~^ The ethical content t)f Ufe is also determined by this same standard of the indweUing Spirit. Since the ' Christian is a Christ-filled man, he must set up just as high an ethical criterion for himself as he does for the Deity. The fact that a Christian has the divine Spirit makes it necessary for him in the ethical realm to repro duce a God-like type of Ufe. This requirement is fre quently emphasized by Paul, in his demands that the body be kept pure as a proper dwelling-place for the Spirit, and that the fruits of the Spirit be manifest 352 The Evolution of Early Christianity constantly. P^ul, further, always insisted that man him self must bear the ultimate responsibility for his conduct. He could not hope for success unless he called in the divine helper, the Spirit, to support his effort; yet it was he, and not the Spirit, who took the initiative and with whom the ultimate responsibiUty rested. If the apostle had not imbibed from his Hebrew heritage so emphatic a notion of personal responsibiUty and so purely ethical a conception of God, he might have been less insistent in his ethical demands as a Christian. But since his God was the ethical deity of Judaism, the life of the God-filled individual must measure up to the highest ethical standards. The final consequence of union with Christ was par- -ticipation in his triumph over^death, with the accompa nying heavenly reward. \ Those who should live unfilthe end came would in~the twinkling of an eye be freed from this body of flesh and equipped with a proper spirit body; and those beUevers who had already died would be raised from the abode of the dead to receive their new spiritual body. Because Christ himself had triumphed over death they that were Christ's would share a simi lar triumph. The union which had been established between Christ and the beUever was not for this Ufe only; the divine part which had entered the Christian would remain with him even in death, thus assuring him a place in the kingdom of the redeemed. But there would be different grades in that new kingdom. Some would enter with high honors while others would barely come through the testing fire. Was this variation due to the Spirit's failure to do its redeem ing work as well for one person as it did for another? The Triumph of Christianity 353 Not at aU! The future reward was conditioned upon i man's own effort in avaiUng himself of the help of ( the Spirit to produce the fruit of righteousness. The Ifact that the beUever had received the Spirit might insure entrance into the kingdom of the redeemed, but the position he was to occupy under the new regime depended upon how well his works stood the fiery testing of the last great day. Paul had fought for the notion that salvation is by faith, resulting in union with Christ, but he still beUeved that rewards were conditioned by works. This was the religion to which Paul endeavored to win the gentile world. It preserved a large number of Jewish characteristics, but it also contained many new features serving to meet certain religious demands dis tinctive of the Graeco-Roman world in Paul's day. He kept the Jewish figure of the Messiah, but he presented him in a form which transcended that of the Roman emperor who was being worshiped as savior. Lord, son of God, and God. Christianity was the new imperial reUgion which held out to beUevers not merely temporary civic blessings but membership in an eternal divine kingdom. The Cynic-Stoic preacher might exhort his hearers to cultivate peace of mind and self-reaUzation of spirit to be exhibited in a Ufe of noble ethical, attainment. Christianity, however, not only insisted upon the realiza tion of these values but suppUed a new power for making their attainment possible. In this latter respect Paul was more closely akin to the ideal of the contemporary mystery-reUgions. In his pictorial presentation of the crucified Messiah he was able to stage a more vivid and effective mystery-drama, he beUeved, than that which one 354 The Evolution of Early Christianity witnessed in the rites of any other cult. His religion — like the other mysteries, but more effectively in the beUef of Christians — suppUed to initiates the privilege of union with the dying and rising Savior who ultimately would \confer upon his followers a life of immortal blessedness. Are we to think of Paul as creating his Christianity by a process of deliberate selection, in which he first takes a number of things from Judaism, then further items from the primitive Christians, and lastly a quantity of materials from contemporary heathen faiths? Certainly not! Paul's reUgion was not an artificial creation but an affair of real life, the result of many forces intermingling in the making of his experience. Because his lot was cast in a time when, and in regions where, the religious Ufe of humanity was being molded by a particular environment, because the human spirit in that day was working out its reUgious destiny along these Unes, because the more serious spirits of the time were finding and serving God in this way, Paul's religion also took this form. He was not merely stooping to accommodate himself to the needs of his age; rather he was imbibing its atmosphere, growing strong in faith and mighty in spiritual stature as he worshiped and served his crucified and risen Re deemer in the language and under the inspirations furnished by the world of his own immediate experience. He vigorously presented to others this new religion of redemption which satisfied the yearnings of his own spirit, and they with similar needs also found here new religious satisfactions. Thus Christianity began its conquest of the gentile world in those regions where Paul labored as a pioneer. The Triumph of Christianity 355 We may ask in the next place how those Christians who preserved Synoptic Gospel traditions sought to make their faith a winning reUgion. Speaking generally, the first three Gospels endeavor to exhibit the superior attractiveness of the new religion by emphasizing two main items: (i) the Jesus of history with his personal ideals of character and conduct, and (2) the Christ of faith whom believers revere almost if not quite to the point of worshiping him. In the thinking of early Christians the historical Jesus apparently had, apart from mere identity of personality, Uttle in common with the heavenly Messiah yet to be revealed in glory. Attention was fixed mainly on the future. Memory of the earthly Jesus, visions of him risen and glorified, and the disciples' own ecstatic life undoubtedly seemed to them adequate proof of Jesus' present lordship in the realm of heavenly spirits where he was awaiting the proper time for his appearing as Messiah. The manner of his earthly life contrasted sharply with the brilUant exhibition of messianic splendor he was about to make. The later custom of viewing his earthly career as a unique display of messianic functions tended not only to dim the early believers' vivid sense of the kingdom's future manifestation but also to obscure those elements of simplicity and naturalness which belong to their thought of the historical Jesus. We must not forget that there were once Christians who be lieved Jesus had been made both Lord and Christ through the resurrection, that this was the moment when he had been designated Son of God with power, and that his life upon earth had been in the form of a lowly servant.' 'Cf. Rom. 1:4; Phil. 2:7 f.; Acts 2:36; 3:13, 26. 3S6 The Evolution of Early Christianity The early disciples, on the strength of this faith, were devoutly praying "Maranatha," but in spite of their fervent prayer the Lord delayed his coming. In this delay they saw an indication of duty; they must prepare the world for the Messiah's advent by gathering a band of believers to be citizens of the new kingdom. Hence in their active propaganda they directed attention chiefly toward the heavenly Christ. When preaching to Jewish audiences it was necessary to demonstrate that the risen Jesus was to be Israel's long-expected deliverer, and among Gentiles it was desirable to show that the coming Jesus was not only the savior promised to the Jews but that he was also the divinely appointed redeemer of the whole world. This inter pretation gave the new religion the sanctity of antiquity and proved at the same time the folly of Jewish unbelief. In whatever land they preached the early Christian missionaries proclaimed a gospel of redemption centering about the person of the coming Messiah. Notwithstanding this interest in the Christ of faith there were several forces at work tending to preserve the story of Jesus' life and teaching as a means of insuring the success of the new movement. Memory of Jesus' earthly career formed, as we have already observed, the cornerstone of the new faith for the first disciples. In the Ught of later experiences they found a new meaning in his words and deeds as meditation brought to mind more vividly the events of the past. Jewish .Christians had previously been accustomed to draw inspiration from teachers of repute in earlier times, so they turned all the more readily to Jesus for instruction. The Jews' sensitiveness to ethical demands was also inherited by The Triumph of Christianity 357 the early Christians, consequently they were predisposed to preserve this type of tradition from Jesus. Since his personaUty had impressed them so forcibly it is alto gether probable that many of his words and ideals had become indeUbly stamped upon their minds. The heri tage of reUgio-ethical teaching which they had received from him not only was a great power in their own lives but became a very significant item in the success of their cause. The necessity of organizing an independent move ment to stand over against Judaism also strengthened interest in preserving Jesus' teaching. As Moses had been the founder of the old religion, so Jesus now became a second Moses, figuring as the teacher upon whose authority the new movement rested. His word was set above that of the ancients, although in the main he sup plemented rather than denied what "they of old time" had said. Ultimately believers were able to assemble a body of instruction from him covering not only matters of personal living but also more formal features connected with the organic life of the community. He was beUeved to have set the example for practicing the rite of bap tism, his last meal with the disciples was made the church's model for the Eucharist, and he was said to have authenticated the entire missionary enterprise. For many persons it added much to the strength of the new movement when the authority of a traditional founder could be cited in support of its varied Ufe. There doubtless was many a "TheophUus" in the first century who was anxious to be assured, through some account of Jesus' words and deeds, of the gospel's cer tainty. The abiUty of Christian teachers to supply this 358 The Evolution of Early Christianity demand doubtless formed an important item in the strength of the new religion. Jesus' authority as a teacher was employed also in defining Christianity's relations to rival movements. John the Baptist and his followers were given a high rat ing, but still they were assigned a subordinate position. Jesus' estimate of contemporary Judaism was much more unfavorable. The disciples cited him to justify their hostile attitude toward the whole ceremonial system. He had taught freedom toward the Sabbath, fasting he had permitted but only in a modified form, he had declared all meats clean^ he had criticized the temple cultus, and he had pronounced bitter woes upoi^ the Pharisees, frequently consigning them to etemal per dition. The Christians had, to be sure, reached their full sense of separateness from Judaism only gradually, but once compelled to break their Jewish connections they found much satisfaction in being able to recall Jesus' teaching in their favor. Thus they were able to strengthen their own convictions and buttress the Christians' cause when asked why the Jews had re jected a movement originally so closely associated with Judaism. In picturing Jesus as an ideal teacher of ethics and reUgion, Christians were also equipping themselves to meet the needs of the Gentiles. Ever since the time of Socrates a new ethical impulse had been at work in the Graeco-Roman world. In New Testament times this phase of life was being diUgently cultivated by the wide spread and persistent activity of Cynic-Stoic preachers. Socrates and other similar teachers were presented as models of wisdom and virtue for later genera- The Triumph of Christianity 359 tions.' The admirers of a teacher would also write ac counts of his life and work, lauding his superior piety or knowledge, and often impressing readers with the fact that the hero was no ordinary person.' The Gospels, all written in Greek and manifestly intended in their present form to be read by Gentiles, present Jesus as the founder of a new teaching which not only transcends Judaism but inculcates all those ethical ideals to the attainment of which the noblest Stoic teachers were exhorting their hearers. By example as well as by precept Jesus became an ideal character for these circles of gentile thinking. They were accustomed to admire the self-sacrifice and devotion of a teacher to his cause, but the simplicity and sincerity of Jesus' life, and his insistent demand that the disciples follow his example, all constituted elements of attractiveness for the Gentiles among whom this faith.- was preached. The Gospels show still another interest in recording the Ufe of Jesus. The evangelists all seek to advance the authority of the new reUgion by making the Jesus of history an appropriate person to become the Christ of faith. This is a very prominent item in the New Testa ment biographies and it is this feature which chiefly distinguishes the Gospels from all contemporary bio graphical literature. However much Christian preachers ' For example, Epictetus' references to Socrates, Disc, i. 4. 4; 9. i, 5; 17. i; 25. 4; 26. 3; 29. 10; U. 2. i; 6. 2; 12. 2; 18. 4; 26. 2; in. 1. 4; 12. 4; 14. 4; 23. i; 24. 4; iv. 1. 18; 5. i; 8. 5; 11. 3. " A few examples of this biographical Uterature are Xenophon's Memorabilia of Socrates, Arrian's Discourses of Epictetus and Anabasis ef Alexander, Plutarch's Lives, Suetonius' Lives ef the Caesars, Diogenes Laertius' Lives and Teachings of the Philosophers, PhUostratus' Life of Apollonius. 360 The Evolution of Early Christianity aimed to strengthen their cause by appealing to the Ufe and teaching of the earthly Jesus, they believed never theless that faith in the heavenly Christ was the main bulwark of the new religion. They not only strove to emulate Jesus' example as a religious person, but that example seemed to them so extraordinary as to demand a supernatural interpretation of his significance. The only instrument at hand which appeared to them as at all adequate for this purpose was the Jewish apocalyptic hope. In earlier stages of thinking Jesus' words and deeds were recorded with a view to demonstrating that he was worthy of faith as the future Messiah, but ultimately he came to be regarded as already discharging messianic functions while on earth. The non-Markan sections of the S3Tioptic Gospels common to Matthew and Luke depict Jesus mainly as a teacher. He is assumed to be a supernaturally endowed individual, but he refuses at the outset to make his career one of miraculous display. He finds the acme of his ambition realized in preaching the gospel to the poor, and is content to await God's own good time for the revelation of his messianic glory. This disposition to set Jesus' teaching in the foreground, deriving evidence of his uniqueness mainly from the power with which he spoke his message, was a most appropriate way of approaching Jews who reverenced above all others those historical personages whom God had chosen to utter his message. / With Mark, on the other hand, another interest becomes prominent. Instead of recording Jesus' refusal to make any miraculous displays, Mark's account of the Temptation emphasizes the miracle-element — the The Triumph of Christianity 361 wild beasts are docile in Jesus' presence and he is attended by ministering angels. Furthermore, miracles characterized his ministry from the start and demon strated his power over the demons who recognized in him the Messiah. People in general might not have eyes to see that this earthly individual actually pos sessed the authority of the apocal}^tic Son of Man, but had they been endowed with the supernatural vision enjoyed by demons they would have perceived not only that Jesus was to be the future Messiah but that his present career was a preliminary exhibition of messianic functions. In stressing this side of Jesus' work Mark made the new religion capable of ministering to a very pressing demand, particularly among his gentile audi ences. We have earlier noted the degree to which the common people of the Graeco-Roman world were bound by the fetters of gross superstition, fearing evil demons of all sorts. To such persons the new gospel came as a message of deliverance and protection. They did not need to wait until the end of the world to enjoy the blessings of the new kingdom. Jesus already having been Messiah while upon earth, it was now possible for believers to reaUze the kingdom's privileges. Victory over demons in the power of Jesus' name was one of its most significant blessings, made possible through Jesus' messianic triumph over Satan. In the course of time many other reasons were urged in favor of the growing belief that the messianic kingdom had already been really established. Evidence of this was seen in the beUef that Jesus had been miraculously begotten, and had been pronounced Son of God, both at baptism and in connection with the transfiguration. 362 The Evolution of Early Christianity Many of his words and deeds seemed to be a fulfilment of messianic prophecy, and he had finally indicated the messianic significance of his career by his triumphal entry into Jerusalem. Although these items were originally Jewish in character, they were now viewed as part of God's scheme for accomplishing the salvation of all men. The more strongly beUevers stressed faith in Jesus'as actually discharging messianic functions in his earthly career, the more readily could they claim to possess at present a full salvation. Thus a once vivid future hope, growing dim with age, was supplanted by the conception of salvation as a present realization. Jesus had, in the main at least, completed his redeeming work in the past, he had finished his task with the end of his earthly life and his ascent to heaven. This type of faith finds more complete expression in the Fourth Gospel. Here Jesus is quite exclusively the Christ of faith — not the apocalyptic Messiah, but the pre-existent heavenly Logos. The PauUne and the synoptic eschatological imagery has almost completely vanished. Jesus is still the Son of Man,' but not in the Danielle sense as so often with the other evangeUsts.' While John is apparently familiar with this earlier usage,' it no longer has any real meaning for him and his circle. When asked, "Who is the Son of Man?" Jesus repUes, "Yet a Uttle while is the light among you. Walk while '1:51; 3:13 f.; 6:27,53,62; 8:28; 9:35(?); 12:23,34; 13:31. " In the first three Gospels he is portrayed either in humiUty and weakness corresponding to the " Son of Man " of Ezekiel and Psalms; or, in Une with Daniel 7 : 13 and later apocalyptic imagery, he is a heavenly being to come in glory upon the clouds. The much-debated question regarding his own use of this term does not concern us at present. ^5:27- The Triumph of Christianity 363 ye have the light that darkness overtake you not. He that walketh in the darkness knoweth not whither he goeth. While ye have the light beUeve on the light that ye may become sons of light." This is the key to all the fourth evangelist's language about Jesus as the Son of Man. He is the light-bringer, the life-giver, the truth-revealer, the mediator of eternal wisdom. He is a pre-existent heavenly being, come forth from God to com municate divine knowledge to men, to give them the meat and drink of eternal Ufe, to provide them a divine enUght enment, and to bring them into communion with God. His coming is synchronous with the incarnation, and his glorification is complete when he is lifted up on the cross — like the serpent, the symbol of wisdom and heaUng — in order that he may become conspicuous in the eyes of the people who will find eternal Ufe by believing on him. His redeeming work now having been accompUshed, he ascends to heaven "where he was before." One might trace other terms or ideas through the Gospel of John and find the same general attitude con stantly in evidence. According to this evangeUst the Christian redemption was fully completed so far as the divine side was concerned through the revelation Jesus made while on earth. He had then exhibited his cre dentials perfectly, being plainly attested by John the Baptist, fulfilUng Old Testament Scripture, performing a series of miracles to support faith, and asserting from the start that he was the heavenly redeemer com missioned to save the world. Hence salvation was to be procured simply by recognizing in Jesus the heaven-sent son of God. It was Ufe eternal to know the only true God, seeing him in Jesus Christ who had been sent to 364 The Evolution of Early Christianity convey to men the saving light of divine knowledge.' The transition from death — the status of every unbe liever — to eternal life, was a present experience, and judgment was passed at once upon all those who refused to beUeve in Jesus. Men brought this judgment upon themselves in the present by the very act of unbelief. The program of the earlier Christians, who pictured a great assize at the end of the age when the Messiah would come to conduct final judgment, making a complete manifestation of his messianic power, gives place to an interpretation of Jesus in which his earthly career con tained the full display of his heavenly glory. The eternal destiny of men is decided by their present choices and the faithful at death individually were to be taken to the mansions above to dwell with Jesus forever. Attain ment of immortal blessedness was still the supreme end of life, but it was to be reached by way of faith in Jesus as a past rather than a future Savior. Thus Christianity is still a reUgion of redemption, although it has lost many of its primitive Jewish features. This transformation was undoubtedly a very fortunate one for the new religion's success among Gentiles. Paul had preached the new gospel in the form of a mystery, verbally depicting the crucifixion of Jesus before the eyes of his hearers who were moved to accept the new faith and received an experience of the Spirit's power. John presented the new reUgion in the form of a "gnosis," a heavenly knowledge, a divine revelation. One who received this revelation experienced an enlightenment which constituted a new birth. Paul appealed to per sons who had been accustomed to seek satisfaction for religious needs in mystery-cults, with their pictorial 'E.g., 1:18; 3:16; 17:3. The Triumph of Christianity 365 displays of a redemptive transaction and their accom panying rites. Such persons seem to have belonged mainly to the proletariat, who were fond of reaUsm and often measured reUgion in terms of physical emotion. This for the most part was the type of person attracted to Christianity when preached by Paul in Corinth, judging from the conditions revealed in the Corinthian correspondence. We have already observed within the Graeco-Roman world another reUgious need, partially satisfied by the mysteries but tending to measure reli gious values more definitely in terms of "intellectual" emotion and theological speculation. It was this class of individual that John seemingly, aimed to reach with his doctrine of the Logos Christ. While he presents Christianity in language that would naturally appeal to the "intellectual" mystic, there is still in John a touch of realism which at first sight seems to harmonize closely with a very primitive sort of sacramentaUsm. He allows Jesus to say to Nicodemus that salvation can be obtained only by being born of water and spirit, while on another occasion Jesus affirms that eternal Ufe is obtained only by eating the flesh and drinking the blood of the Son of Man.' In this John also shows his attachment to the Christian ordinances of baptism and the Lord's Supper, but it is perfectly clear from the context that the rites had been "spirituaUzed" although, as in Paul's case, the absorp tion of the spiritual substance may be reaUstically connected with the ritualistic observance.' While it is '3:3-14; 6:26 ff. " On the sacramentaUsm of John see Reitzenstein's various writings {passim), and the counter-view of Krebs, Der Logos ais Heiland im ersten Jahrhundert (Freiburg, 1910). 366 The Evolution of Early Christianity affirmed very expUcitly that one must eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of Man, the context immedi ately adds, "it is the Spirit that quickeneth, the flesh profiteth nothing. " But the Spirit is not that indweUing, ecstatic power described by Paul; it is rather the inner light of a new knowledge — "the words I have spoken unto you are spirit and life." Likewise, the new birth is a birth into divine knowledge which the Son of Man has brought down from above. Now all this is a very realistic matter, the ordinances of baptism and the Lord's Supper being important factors in the mediation of these experiential facts. The rites are sacramental in the sense of being instrumental — perhaps indeed indis pensable — in procuring for the believer a reaUstic quantity of divine knowledge, but that this knowledge was resident in the emblems of which the commimicant partook is probably no part of John's thought. It was what came down from heaven that must be eaten, that is, the divine wisdom, of which the Son of Man was the revelation. Thus the fourth evangelist made a significant con tribution toward the expansion of Christianity in the Graeco-Roman world. Paul and his associates had been most successful among the lower classes to whom Chris tianity's new moral earnestness and vivid assurances of future blessedness made a strong appeal when preached in the form of a new mystery-reUgion, but those Gentiles who were disposed to " intellectualize " the mysteries responded less readily to Paul's preaching. Further more, we must recognize that the apostle, notwith standing the remarkable manner in which he advocated salvation for the Gentiles, was still Jewish in much of The Triumph of Christianity 367 his thinking and did not really succeed in formulating a phUosophy of Christianity to include important items of reUgious speculation current in the gentile world. Paul never wholly abandoned the effort to divert the streams of Graeco-Roman thinking into Jewish channels, just as he never gave up hope that the Jewish nation would become the crowning fruit of the gospel tree. This hope bad-been surrendered when the Fourth Gospel was written._ Instead of attempting to turn gentUe thinking toward Palestine, it was now discovered that the stream of oriental religious speculation which had entered on its course through the Graeco-Roman world might be made to bear along upon its tide Christianity's new faith and Ufe. Accordingly the supremacy of Jesus the redeemer was newly affirmed in the form of a divine deUverer me.dia^ing'the knowledge of God to benighted humanity. " Formerly this divine help was conceived in various forms, such as the "Son of Man" in the old Egyptian messianic texts, the Adapa of Babylonian legend, the "Primal Man" of Persian speculation,' and hj^ostases like "Light," "Life," "Knowledge," "Truth," which played a role in early gnostic speculation. The author of the Fourth Gospel has taken this vague conception of divine deliverance and raised it to the nth. power in the figure of Jesus, the pre-existent Son of Man who was one with the Father before the foundation of the world. Thus Christianity was freed from all nationaUstic limitations; " it was a divinely guaranteed revelation to be obtained through the aid of a truly universal Savior of mankind. ' See "Der Urmensch" in Bousset, Hauptprobleme der Gnosis, pp. 160-223, and Kristensen, "Die term 'Zoon des Meuschen' toegelicht uit de anthropologie der ouden,'' Theelegisch Tijdschrift, XLV (1911), 1-38; Reitzenstein, Poimandres, pp. 59-116. See also above, pp. 326 ff. 368 The Evolution of Early Christianity The course of Christians' religious development in relation to their environment during the first century has been traced with sufficient fulness to disclose the general trend in the process of the new religion's expan sion. It became a many-sided movement, laying hold upon a wide range of vital interests within the Graeco- Roman world. It came to include, usually in a height ened degree, many religious values which its competitors had been seeking to cultivate before the Christian preachers appeared upon the scene. Being itself of oriental origin it readily assumed many of the features which had made oriental mystery-cults and speculations attractive to many persons in the Roman empire. It was pre-eminently a reUgion of redemption with a Savior whose figure was more real and whose credentials appeared stronger than those of any mythical dying and rising divinity. When occasion required, the Christian Savior was readily made the center of a type of speculation capable of appealing to the most vigorous religious thinking of the time. While this new reUgion was emphatically a faith for the individual soul, it also satisfied the group- consciousness by assembling a new community to con stitute the kingdom of God on earth. Its early adherents and missionaries belonged to the masses, consequently it was a vital movement from the start and spread widely with the shifting currents of syncretistic life. To the individual who felt himself drifting hope lessly on this boundless sea, Christianity offered very definite religious guidance. It gave an assurance of salvation for the immortal soul, it appealed to the imagination and emotions, in its sacred rites it answered The Triumph of Christianity 369 the current longing for realism, it satisfied inteUectual demands as they arose, it awakened conscience by its insistence on rewards and punishments, it sounded a strong ethical note, and in its doctrine of the one true God it gave men a sufficiently large conception of Deity to meet the needs of an enlarging world and an imperial istic age. But in the last analysis it owed its triumph to the activity of loyal individuals who not only answered the call of God as they heard it in their own lives or dis cerned it on the pages of history, but who learned, con sciously or unconsciously, to read the divine will as revealed in the "signs of the times." They were sensitive to the religious forces within their environment, and so drew inspiration from its life and responded to its needs by conserving, heightening, and supplementing current religious values. Under the guidance of these indi viduals the genius of the new religion is disclosed in their expanding life. If Christians today would be true successors of those ancient worthies they too must ^akejeligipn an affair of life and growth commensurate with the needs of the present generation. INDEXES SUBJECTS AND AUTHORS Abelson, 88. Academics, 255 ff. Achelis, 42. Adapa, 367. Adonis, 74, 300, 307 ff., 336. Aegesilaus, 294. Aelian, 57. Aeschines, 297. Aeschylus, 53. Ahura Mazda, 311. Alexander the Great, 48 f., 51 ff., 53 ff., 56, 58, 195, 20s ff., 230 f., 359- Alexander the Prophet, 262. Allard, 191. AUegory, 2 74 f . Allen, 289. AUo, 189. Am61ineau, 327. 'Am-ha'arets, 93. Anihita (Anaitis), 311 ff. Ananus, 126. Anaxagoras, 240. Andocides, 294. Anrich, 287, 350. Antigonids, 59. Antipater the Stoic, 268. Antisthenes, 266. Antony, 212 f. Anz, 326. Aphrodite, 74, 210, 306. . Apocalypticism, 360 ff. Apollonius of Tyana, 233, 290, 359. Apollos, 35. Appian, 54. Apuleius, 319, 322 f. Archedemus, 268. AreUius Fuscus, 233. Aristobulus, 54. Aristophanes, 295. Aristotle, 53, 62, 204 f., 256, 279, 291. Arneth, von, 191, 248. Arnim, von, 263 f., 269, 272 f. Arnobius, 303. Arnold, 263 f., 271, 278. Arrian, 54, 56, 206 f., 233, 359. Artachaees, 203. Ashtart, 74, 306 f. Ashtoreth, 306 f . Astarte, 306. Astrology, 243 ff., 248, 312 f., 32s f- Atargatis, 74, 309 f. Athenagoras, 184. Athenodorus, 268. Attis, 74, 185, 300, 302 ff., 336. Augustine, 184 f. Augustus, 64, 75, 296, 304. Babelon, 60. Bacchic mysteries, 282. Bacchus, 225, 297 ff., 318. Bacon, 116. Badham, 125. Back, 91. Baldensperger, 104. Baptism, 185; early practice of, 340; in Fourth Gospel, 365 f.; Jewish, 340; in PauUne usage, 113; 347 f. Barnabas, 102. Bar-rekub, 309. Baudissin, von, 305. Bauer, A., 66, 198. Bauer, B., 278. Baumgarten, F., 66. Baumgarten, M., 278. Baur, F. C, 13, 18, 94, 98 ff., 327. Baur, F. F., 98. Behm, 153. Beloch, 53, 69, 198. Benn, 254. Bennett, 90. Benzinger, 134. Bergmann, 91. Berosus, 312. 371 The Evolution of Early Christianity 372 Bertholet, 79, 104, 170, 176, 245. 340. Beurlier, 197. Bevan, 60, 263. Bischoff, 90. Bohlig, 108, 310. Boklen, 194. Boissier, 197. BoU, 244. Bonhoffer, 44, 188, 278. Bosc, 186. Bouch6-Leclercq, 54, 60 f., 244. Boulage, 316. Bousset, 79, 88, 104, 108 ff., iii, 113, 115, 119, 125, 128, 192, 245, 288, 327, 340, 367. Box, 79, 340. Brandt, 340. Brasidas, 203. Breasted, 76, 219 f. Bruckner, 104, 192, 336. Briinnow, 222. Brun, 142. Buckland, 69. Biichler, 92 f. Bultmann, 279. Bunbury, 49. Buonaiuti, 327. Burel, 315. Calderini, 69. Caligula, 75. Carneades, 257. Carter, 77. Cams, 186. Catholicism, 3 f., 7 ff., 13. CatuUus, 304. ChampoUion-Figeac, 61. Chantepie de la Saussaye, 76. Charismata, 129. Charles, 104 f . Cheetham, 287. Christ, von, 68. Christianity, Babylonian influ ence upon, 193; breach with Judaism, 123 ff.; Buddhistic influence upon, 194; CathoUc idea of, 3 f.; changes within, I ff.; contact with Gentiles, 178 ff.; development of, 2 ff., 34, 36, 333 f.; distinctiveness of, 96; divisions of, 98 ff.; early ex tent of, 50 f.; Egyptian influence upon, 193; "essence" of, 19 ff., 90 ff.; expansion of, 102 f., 168, 181 ff.; of Fourth Gospel, 362 ff.; genuineness of, 23 f.; Jewish opposition to, 96 f.; "liberal," 16 ff.; Modernist view of, 20 f.; nationaUsm in, 339; nature of, i ff.; newness of, 35 ff.; origin of, 28, 41; ori ginaUty of, 188 ff.; of Paul, 341 ff.; persecution of, 124 ff.; Persian influence upon, 194; Protestant idea of, 4ff.; as a redemption religion, 364 ff.; re lation to emperor-worship, 197 ff.; 218 ff.; relation to environ ment, 19, 26 ff.; relation to Judaism, 32, 78 ff., 84 ff., 106; relation to politics, 196 ff.; relation to Stoicism, 277 ff.; reUgious setting of, 30 ff.; of Synoptic Gospels, 355 ff. Christology, 333 ff., 355 ff. Chrysippus, 268. Church, 5, 18. Chwolson, 92. Cicero, 229 f., 241, 243, 245, 252, 255 ff., 289 f., 295 f., 300, 307. Cleanthes, 264, 268, 322. Clemen, 44, 188, 278, 287, 350. Clement of Alexandria, 125 f., 184 f., 294, 312. Cleomenes, 206. Colani, 104. CoUn, 54. Comparetti, 301. Conybeare, 192. Cooke, G. A., 306, 309. Corssen, 69. Crates, 267. Creuzer, 293. Crinagoras, 296. CrioboUum, 304. Croiset, 68. Cumont, 77, 185, 192, 233, 242 ff., 248 f., 287, 302, 304 f., 310, 314, 316, 350. Cybele, 74, 302 ff., 310. Cynicism, 266. Cynics, 74. Cyrnus, 203. Indexes 373 Dalman, ii6 f. Darius, 56 f. De Boor, 125. De Faye, 327. Deification, 229; of Antigonids, 208 f.; of Bacchus, 318; of Hercules, 318; of heroes, 203 ff.; of Isis, 318; of Osiris, 318; of Ptolemies, 209 f.; of Roman emperors, 211 ff.; of Seleucids, 210 f. Deism, 10, 187. Deissmann, 29, 66, 198, 236, 320. De Jong, 287, 315. De le Roi, 91. Demeter, 74, 289, 291 ff., 296, 302. Demetrius of Phalerum, 242. Democritus, 242, 259. Demon possession, 152 ff. Demons, 155 ff. Demosthenes, 297. Dennis, 315. De Quincey, 94. De Sainte-Croix, 293. Destiny {elfunp/iivrf) , 243. Dhorme, 76. Diadochi, 51. Diaspora, 30 f., 80, 82, 106. Diatribe, 279. DibeUus, 155. Didache, 116. Diels, 241, 24s, 300. Dieterich, 192, 247, 294, 300, 310, 329. 350- Dill, 66, 245, 302, 310, 316. Dillmann, 104. Diodorus, 54 ff., 207 f., 295, 303, 320, 322. Diogenes the Cjmic, 294. Diogenes Laertius, 258, 267 f., 294, 314, 359- Diogenes the Stoic, 268. Dion Cassius, 212, 216. Dion of Syracuse, 207-. Dionysus, 74, 210, 230, 295, 297 ff., 300 f., 349. Dittenberger, 215 f. Divination, 248, 274. Divine descent, of ApoUonius of Tyana, 233; of astrologers, 233; of Augustus, 234; of Jesus, 234 f. Dobschiitz, von, 350. Droysen, 54. Drucker, 92. Duchesne, 191. Dupuis, 186. Duris, 207. Duschak, 89. Ebionites, 94. Ecstasy, 128 ff., 291 f., 298 ff., 304, 310. Edmonds, 308. Edmunds, 194. Eichhorn, 192. Elements {S, 367. Religionsgeschichtliche School, 108, 191. Renan, 191. Renault, 258. Resurrection, of Adonis, 307 ff.; of Attis, 303; of Jesus, 333 ff.; of Osiris, 317; of Tammuz, 306, Rhode, 295. Richter, 186. Riess, 245. Ritschl, 16 ff. Robinson, 90. Rodrigues, 89. Roma, 211, 213 f. Roman emperors, 62. Ropes, 42. Rosetta Stone, 209. Sabazius, 297. Sacraments, in Christianity, 341 ; in Fourth Gospel, 365 ff.; in Mithraism, 313; in the mys teries, 294, 299 f.; in Paul's letters, 349 ff. Sadducees, 30, 82, 163. Salvation, 284 ff. Sanhedrin, 92. Sappho, 307. Sargon I, 199. Satirists, 251. Schafer, 315. Schanz, von, 68. Schechter, 88. 378 The Evolution of Early Christianity Schleiermacher, 15 ff. Schmidt, 77, 302, 316. Schneider, 6g. Schottgen, 8g. Schrader, 193. Schreiber, 89. Schiirer, 79 f., 88, 93, 104 f., 170, 173 ff., 34°. Schultz, 327. Schwartz, 125. Schweitzer, 104, nof., 186. Scott, 104, 176. Scylas, 298. Seleucid kingdom, 59 f. Seleucid rulers, 60. Seneca, 184, 268 f., 272, 275 ff., 278. Serapis, 74, 115, 316 ff. Sethe, 316. Seydel, 194. Showerman, 302. Siegfried, go. Sikes, 28g. Smith, G. A., 49. Smith, WiUiam, 49. Smith, W. R., 305. Socrates, 53, 183, 240, 265, 272, 358 f. Soltau, 188. Son of God, 232. Son of Man, 105, log, 361 ff., 365 f., 367. Sophocles, 53, 289. Sorley, 100. Spiess, 187. Spirit, endowing Messiah, 128 ff.; how obtained, 131 ff.; Christian idea of, 129 ff., 351; Paul's idea of, 341 ff.; Stoic idea of, 343 f. Spitta, 167. StaheUn, 173. Staerk, 66, 170. Stave, 194. Steck, 278. Steindorff, 76. Steiner, 61. Steinmann, 69. Stephen, 35, 85. Stilpo, 267. Stobaeus, 291. Stocks, 29. Stoicism, 76, 262 ff., 267 ff., 286 f. Stoics, 74, 183, 25s ff., 343 f- Storrs, 4. Strabo, 49, 56, 80, 173 f., 205, 248, 268, 314. Strack, 61. Strong, 305. Suetonius, 75, 116, 212, 214, 216 f., 234, 244, 249, 29s, 310, 3S9- Suidas, 208. Superstition, 245 ff. Susemihl, 68. Synesius, 292. Syrian goddess, 310. Tabnith, 306. Tacitus, 70, 116., 216. Tahnud, 87. Tammuz, 74, 306 f. Tarn, 59. Tarsus, 268. Taurobolium 304 f. Taylor, 300. Teichmann, 350. Telesterion, 290. TertuUian, 184 f. Testament of Judah, 129; of Levi, 129. Teuffel, 68. Thackeray, 79. Theocritus, 299, 308. Therapeutae, 93, 97. ThieUng, 54. Thot (Tat), 328. Thucydides, 53, 203. Thumb, 29. Thureau-Dangin, igg. Tiberius, 244. TibuUus, 223, 300, 319 f. Tiele, 77. Tindal, 187. Tiridates, 216. Titans, 300. Toland, 94. Torah, 81 f., 134. Toutain, 77, 198, 244, 287, 302, 30s, 310, 316. Toy, 76, 79, 193. Trajan, 49. Trench, 187. Trezza, 258. Troeltsch, 13 f., 70. Tucker, 66. Indexes 379 Tubingen School, 13, 17, 94, 103, 107 f., no. Typhon, 318. Ueberweg, 254. Uhlhorn, 191. Ungnad, 199, 221. Usener, 192, 258. Van den Bergh van Eysinga, 194. VeUay, 305. Vernes, 104. Virgil, 223 f., 230. VoUers, 186. Volney, 186. Volz, 104, 128, 145. Wagner, 66. Wallace, 258. WaUon, 6g. Weber, 88, 316. Wecker, 194. Weinel, 128, 196. Weinreich, 153. Weiss, 104, 108 f., 116, 120, 136, 176. Weizsacker, 42. Wendland, 66, 198, 224, 226, 230, 243, 271, 327. Wernle, gof., 113, 176. Wettstein (Wetstenius), 90. Whittaker, 186. Wiedemann, 76, 318. WUamowitz-Moellendorff, 66. Winckler, 278. Windelband, 254. Windisch, 350. Wissowa, 77, 198, 302, 305, 310, 316. Witkowski, 29. Wobbermin, 287, 295. Wood, 128. Wrede, loi. Wunsch, 192. Wiinsche, go. Xenophanes, 241, 251. Xenophon, 28, 53, 63, 267, 35g. Yahweh, 32, 80 f., 118, 128 f., 137 f., 146 f., 201, 222, 336 f. Zadokite sectaries, 83, 130. Zagreus, 300. Zahn, 117, 278. Zealots, 30, 82, 97, 201. ZeUer, 254, 256, 258, 263, 266, 275. Zeno, 267 f. ZieUnski, 193. Zimmern, 193. SCRIPTURE REFERENCES Exodus 8:1 — 12:51 146 14:21 ff.. - 146 15:23 ff 146 20:18 ff 13s 24:11-16, 18 135 Numbers 9:9-11 136 11:29 137 16 : 29-35 146 17:5 146 Deuteronomy 5:4 f ^35 18:9 ff 144 18:9-22 159 Deuteronomy 18:15 33:2! 160 13s I Samuel 10:5 ff 137 10:6 ff 146 10:10 133 19:20-24 133 19:23 f 146 I Kings 13:4 f., 28 146 17:1 146 II Kings 2:9-15 13:14-19 146146 380 The Evolution of Early Christianity Psalms 68:8 135 Isaiah 9:1 ff 222 9:7 201 ii:i ff 201, 222 , 11:2 129 42:1 129 61:1 f 138 61:1 ff 129 Ezekiel 1:1, 28 133 2:1 ff 133 2:2 ff 133 3:12 133 3:12-24 133 3:24 133 8:3 133 8:3 ff 133 8:14 306,334 n:i 133 ii:S 133 11:24 133 20:26-28, 31,39 IS9 Daniel 2:47 ^^^8 5:23 118 7:13 362 Hosea 9:7 138 Joel 2:28ff 129 Zechariah 12:10 129 12:11 310 Malachi 4:5 147 II Esdras 14:46 83 Tobit 6:8 152 8:2ff 152 n:i-i3 152 Enoch 49:1-4 129 62:2 129 Psalms of Solomon 17:42 129 18:8 129 Matthew 1:22 177 2:15, 17, 23 177 3:4 147 3:11, 16 131 3:i6f 130 4:1 130 4:14 177 5:17-19 120 5:17-20 177 5:24 117 7:6 167 7:22 159 8:n f 167 8:17 177 10: sf., 23 167, 177 10:22 167 11:5 f 142 11:14 • 147 11:25 118 12:17 177 12:25 ff 130 12:27 160 13:14 177 13:26 f 168 13:3s 177 13:37-43,47-50 167 15:24 167, 177 15:26 167 16:20 f 334 16:21 232 17:9 232,334 17:9-13 147 17:22 f 334 17:23 232 19:14 35 19:28 167, 177 2o:i7-r9 334 20:19 232 21:4 177 21:33-44 167 22:1-14 167 23:3a, 236 177 24:14, 34, 45 ff 167 Indexes 381 Matthew Mark 24:20 177 13:3 177 25:21 169 13:10 168 26:13 167 i3:24ff 105 26:65 f 162 14:2, 32 177 27:9 177 14:63 f 162 27:63 f 232 15:34, 42 177 28:19 167 Mark Luke 1:1-3 127 1:6 147 i:3f 127 1:8,10 131 1:15,35,41,67 130 1:10 f., 12, 18, 20 130 1:17 147 1:10 ff 133 1:80 129 f. i:ii I2g 2:2Sf 130 1:22, 32 f 154 2:31 f 178 i:25f.,3i,4i 153 3:6 178 1:27 154, 232 3:16,22 131 2 : 10, 28 232 3 : 21 f 130 2:11 153 4:1,14 130 3:5,9 153 4:i6ff 138,142 3:17 177 4:24-27 178 3 : 23 ff., 2g 130 7 : 22 f 142 3:29 f 154 9:2if., 36, 43-45 334 4:39 153 9:22 232 5:13,23,2s 153 10:9,17 154 5:41 153,177 10:21 118 6:sf., 41, 50, 56 153 11:17 ff 130 6:13 154 12:10 130 7:2-4,11,19,34 177 16:2 116 7:9-13 88 18:16 35 7:29,32 153 18:22 117 8:6,22 153 18:31-34 334 8:30-32 334 18:33 232 8:31 232 22:69 ¦•• 162 8:37 IOS 24:7 232 9:1 168,337 24:47 178 9:9 f 232,334 9:11-13 147 John g:2S 153 1:1 269 9:29 154 1:18 364 9:30-32 334 i:2of., 25 147 9:31 232 1:33 129 9:38 159 1:33a i3of. 10:14 35 1:336 131 10:21 116 1:46 117 10:22 153 1:51 362 10:32-34 334 3:3-14 36s 10:34 232 3:13 f 362 10:46 177 3:16 364 12:18,42 177 3:34 130 12:32 130 4:16 117 382 The Evolution of Early Christianity John Acts 4:22 121 7:54-58 144 5:27 362 8:1 144 6:14 147 8:i4ff 120 6:26ff 365 8:14-17 132 6:27,53,62 362 8:15 ff., 39 131 7:4if 147 8:29 131,133 8:28 362 8:39 f 133 9:35 362 9:3 ff 133 11:43 117 9:17 131 f. 12:20,32 178 9:22 ff 144 12:23,34 362 9:23 125 13:31 362 9:26-30 120 17:3 364 9:29 125 20:22 131 f. 9:31 125, 131 10:2, 22,35 174 Acts 10:38 129 f. 1:1 127 10:40 232 1:2,5 131 10:44-47 131 1:8 131,144,167,178 10:44-48 132 1:8 f 120 10:47 167 1:23 144 11: IS 132 2:1 ff 120,131 11:15-17,24,28 131 2:22 148,232 11:16 131 2:24,32 232 11:17 167 2:36 232,35s i2:iff 125 2:38 132 12:17 126 2:41 142 13:2,4,9,52 131 2:43 145 13:16,43,50 174 3:1 ff 142 I3:24f., 26 147 3:6,12-16 144 13:27 141 3 : 13 355 13 :3o ff 232 3:15 232 13:46 144 3:17 141 15:8,28 131 3:20 f 105 15:13 126 3:22 338 i6:6f 131 3:22-26 160 16:14 174 3:26 355 17:4, 17 174 4:1-3 144 17:31 232 4:3 131 18:2, 24ff 102 4:72 144 18:6 144 4:8 131 18:7 174 4:8-12 160 19:1 102 4:10 232 19:2,6 131 4:33 144 19:2 ff 132 5:3 •¦¦ 131 19:11 ff 249 5:iSf 145 19:13 159 5:16-18, 28 ff., 40 144 20:23,28 131 5:32 131 21:4,11 131 6:1—7:53 144 21:18 126 6:3,5,10 131 22:6ff 133 7:51,55 131 22:19-21 144 Indexes 383 Acts I Corinthians 26:12 ff 133 1:11-13 113 26:19-21 144 1:13 ff 350 28:25 131 1:18-25 179 28:25-28 144 1:21 277 Komans j.^g j^^ 1:4 161,232,355 2:2 132 1:8-15 102 2:4 f 148 1:13-16 177 2:6 155,157 1:16 148 2:6-8 140 1:18-32 179 2:6-10 283 2:8-16 177 2:8 155,157,179 2:i4f 179 f. 2:10-16 131 3:9 177 3:13 Ill 3:9-20 179 3:16, 21 ff 157 3:29f 177,179 3:23 113 4:24 118, 232 4:5 105,111 6:1-11 114 4:17 149 6:3ff 350 5:3f 158 6:4 232 5:5 156 6:16 270 6:3 157 8:1-17 131 6:9 179 8:11 232 6:g-ii 177 8:14-17 157 6:11 350 8:17 112, i6g 6:11-15 114 8:38f 157 6:14 118,232 9:iff 119 6:i5ff iSS, iS7 9:3-5 164 7:5 155 g:22-3i 177 7:8-31 172 9:30 — 10:4 141 7:10 118,150 9:31 ff 179 7:11 149 io:8f 161 7:12 150 10:9 107,171,232 7:14 299 10:9-14 158 7:25 118,150,182 ii:iff 119 7:40 182 n:iiff 177 8:1 ff 177 11:25-32 141,170 8:4 179 I2:if 277 8:4ff 156 13:12 Ill 8:5 f 116,158 14:10 in 9:1 173 15:7-13 177 9:4-6 102 I5:i8f 148 9:5 118,151 15:18-28 168 9:14 118,150 15:19,26-28 120 9:23-27 112,169 15:24,28 51 10:1 ff., 14-22 350 10:1-4 114 I Corinthians 10: 14 ff 177 1:2 157 10:16 115 1:7 171 io:i9ff 155 1:7 f Ill 10:20 179 1:8 f IOS 10:21 IS7 384 The Evolution of Early Christianity I Corinthians 11:2,16 150 11:20-32 350 11:23 118, ISO 11:26 f 118 ii:29ff 156 11:29-32 156 12:1-10 151 12:2 179 i2:8ff 147 12:9 ff 148 12: 10 138 12:12 f 114 12:13 132,350 12:28 138, 147 f., 152 12:28-30 151 14:1 ff 131, 138 14:33 150 15:3, 12 ff 232 i5:5ff 128 15:5-11 161 15:8 173 15:8 f 103 15:9 97 iS:i4ff 171 15:23 ff Ill 15:24-27 157 15:25 f 156 15:25-28 158 15:29 350 15:31 112, 169 16:22 in, 116 II Corinthians 2:11 155 2:14 ff 112, 169 3:17 f 131 4:3 f 179 4:4 155 4:14 232 4:14-17 112, 169 5:10 in 6:15 155 11:14 155 11:22 119 11:24, 32 f 125 12:7 155 12:7 ff 156 12:11-13 151 12:12 148 12:13 149 Galatians 1:1 161,173 1:4 155, 157,179 1:13 97 1:15 f 132 1:16 172 f., 177 1:19 118 f., 126 1:22 119, 150 2:1 ff 150 2:2 ff 177 2:8 103, 172 2:9 126 2 : 14 ff 103 2:20 132 3:1-5 132 3:2 • • 132 3:2-5 131 3:3,5 149 3:3-5 151, 154,172 3:8ff 177 3:19-29 179 3:26-28 113 3:27 350 4:3 245 4:8ff 179 4:9 245 4:29 f 134 5:6 172 6:15 172 Ephesians 1:20 232 2:2 f., 12 179 2:11 177 3:1,6,8 177 4:17 177 4:17 f 179 5:8, 16 179 6:12 1 79 PhUippians 1:6, 10 Ill i:23f 156 2:5-10 318 2:5-11 158 2:6 169 2:7 f 355 2:9 232 2:9 f 229 2:98 115 2:16 112 xnaexes 385 Philippians 3:5 119 3:6 97 4:5 Ill Colossians 1:21 179 1:27 177 2:8 245 2:11 f 114 2:11 ff 350 2:12 232 2: 13, i8 179 2:20 245 I Thessalonians 1:5 148 1:6 118, 132 1:9 177 i:g f 171 1:10 Ill, 232 2:7,16 177 2:14 150 2:14 f 125 2:15 97,118 2:1s f 140, 179 2:18 IS5 2:19 f 112, 169 3:5 155 I Thessalonians 3:6 158 3:13 Ill 3:16 177 4:3-7 177 4:5 179 4:15 118, 150 4:15-18 in 5:2 Ill 5:23 111,156 II Thessalonians 1:7 179 2:8ff 157 2:9 148 II Timothy i:ii 177 4:17 177 Hebrews 2:2-4 134 12:18-24 134 James 5:14-18 15s Revelation 22:20 116 :26'8^