medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
Intriguing. I also have seen this change tied to the origins of eremitical
monasticism in places like Egypt. Going from the danger of death to the
struggles involved in renouncing the world.
Tom Izbicki
At 08:55 AM 3/7/2001 -0500, you wrote:
>medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
>
> > Perhaps it is the concept of "confessor" that
> > changed, from confessing the faith through
> > sufferings (but not death) to confessing the faith
> > against error.
> > Tom Izbicki
>
>This is almost exactly the point made by Robert Markus in his book *The
>End of Ancient Christianity* (Cambridge, 1990), esp. chapter 5. He
>cites impressive evidence of a sort of crisis of identity that hit the
>church when martyrs ceased to be made.
>
>Best wishes,
>
>MW
>
>Mark F. Williams
>Dept. of Classics
>Calvin College
>Grand Rapids, MI
>USA 49546
>
>"Keep your stick on the ice."
> -Red Green
>
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