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Aliens and Sojourners

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Early Christians spoke about themselves as resident aliens, strangers, and sojourners, asserting that otherness is a fundamental part of being Christian. But why did they do so and to what ends? Ho...
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  • 14 July 2009
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Early Christians spoke about themselves as resident aliens, strangers, and sojourners, asserting that otherness is a fundamental part of being Christian. But why did they do so and to what ends? How did Christians' claims to foreign status situate them with respect to each other and to the larger Roman world as the new movement grew and struggled to make sense of its own boundaries?

Aliens and Sojourners argues that the claim to alien status is not a transparent one. Instead, Benjamin Dunning contends, it shaped a rich, pervasive, variegated discourse of identity in early Christianity. Resident aliens and foreigners had long occupied a conflicted space of both repulsion and desire in ancient thinking. Dunning demonstrates how Christians and others in antiquity capitalized on this tension, refiguring the resident alien as being of a compelling doubleness, simultaneously marginal and potent. Early Christians, he argues, used this refiguration to render Christian identity legible, distinct, and even desirable among the vast range of social and religious identities and practices that proliferated in the ancient Mediterranean.

Through close readings of ancient Christian texts such as Hebrews, 1 Peter, the Shepherd of Hermas, and the Epistle to Diognetus, Dunning examines the markedly different ways that Christians used the language of their own marginality, articulating a range of options for what it means to be Christian in relation to the Roman social order. His conclusions have implications not only for the study of late antiquity but also for understanding the rhetorics of religious alienation more broadly, both in the ancient world and today.

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Price: $64.95
Pages: 192
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Divinations: Rereading Late Ancient Religion
Publication Date: 14 July 2009
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780812241563
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: RELIGION / Christianity / History, History of religion
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"A significant contribution to our understanding of early Christian collective self-definition. Dunning shows that many early Christians used ideas about foreignness and civic belonging to shape and contest what it could mean to become and be Christian in the pluralistic cultures under Roman imperial rule."
Benjamin H. Dunning teaches theology at Fordham University.

Introduction: Aliens, Christians, and the Rhetoric of Identity
1. Citizens and Aliens
2. Going to Jesus "Outside the Camp": Alien Identity in Hebrews
3. Outsiders by Virtue of Outdoing: The Epistle to Diognetus
4. Foreign Countries and Alien Assets in the Shepherd of Hermas
5. Strangers and Soteriology in the Apocryphon of James
Conclusion

List of Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments