Genealogía del cristianismo primitivo como religión romana

  • José Fernández Ubiña
Keywords: Christian origins, Jewish Christians, Roman Christianity

Abstract

Born and initially spread as a Jewish movement and unconnected with the classical world, Christianity became an identifiable religion in the mid-second century CE, above all due to its contacts with the Greek civilisation, from which it borrowed many ethical and ideological principles. nevertheless, Christianity only reached its whole identity after its transformation in religion, i.e., in the Roman sense of the word, when Christianity was became to be seen as a supernatural protection for both society and the Roman Empire. With the consequent changes in its hierarchy, rituals, and beliefs, Christian religion thus lost its main Jewish and Hellenistic features. The Constantine’s reform and the religious policy of his successors definitely sealed this radical and far-reaching evolution as this paper will try to focus on in further details, highlighting the most decisive aspects and moments.

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Published
2009-09-25
How to Cite
Fernández Ubiña J. (2009). Genealogía del cristianismo primitivo como religión romana. ’Ilu. Revista de Ciencias de las Religiones, 14, 59-86. https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/ILUR/article/view/ILUR0909110059A
Section
Articles