Under Caesar’s Sword

Author:

Eastman David L.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. McCallie School USA Chattanooga, TN

2. Universität Regensburg Germany Regensburg

3. University of South Africa South Africa Pretoria

Abstract

Abstract In 2019, Cambridge University Press published an edited volume entitled Under Caesar’s Sword, the product of a three-year study on contemporary Christian responses to persecution in various parts of the world. As part of the overall findings, the project directors noted three primary methods of response: (1) Survival strategies (trying to avoid the attention of the persecutors); (2) Association strategies (building relationships beyond their own communities in order to create a broader network of potential support); and (3) Confrontation strategies (directly challenging the persecutors through various means including martyrdom, which Christians accept as an act of resistance). These categories provide a useful heuristic tool for reevaluating the discourse in some early Christian texts, including the apocryphal acts of the apostles and other texts related to martyrdom. This article employs the insights from Under Caesar’s Sword to explore examples of all three strategies from the earliest Christian centuries. However, not all strategies were equally appreciated in that time. Because suffering came to be so closely linked to Christian identity, survival strategies were sometimes critiqued as evidence of a lack of faith.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Religious studies,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference19 articles.

1. Bauman, Chad M., and James Ponniah. “Christian Responses to Repression in India and Sri Lanka: Religious Nationalism, Legal Restriction, and Violence.” Pages 269–273 in Under Caesar’s Sword: How Christians Respond to Persecution. Edited by Daniel Philpott and Timothy Samuel Shah. Cambridge Studies in Law and Christianity. Cambridge; New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2019.

2. Castelli, Elizabeth A. Martyrdom and Memory: Early Christian Culture Making. Gender, Theory, and Religion. New York, NY; Chichester: Columbia University Press, 2004.

3. Cobb L. Stephanie, trans. and ed., and Andrew S. Jacobs, trans. The Passion of Perpetua and Felicitas in Late Antiquity. Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2021.

4. Cobb, L. Stephanie. Divine Deliverance: Pain and Painlessness in Early Christian Martyr Texts. Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2017.

5. Eastman, David L. “Paul as Martyr in the Apostolic Fathers.” Pages 1–19 in The Apostolic Fathers and Paul. Edited by Todd D. Still and David E. Wilhite. Pauline and Patristic Scholars in Debate. London; New York, NY: Bloomsbury/T&T Clark, 2018.

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