The idea of becoming an individual in the context of early Christianity

Authors

  • Павло Павленко

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32420/1997.6.117

Abstract

The last centuries before the beginning of the Christian era, the first centuries after that, were enveloped in the history of mankind as a period of the total crisis and the decline of the Greco-Roman civilization, a crisis that covered virtually all spheres of the social life of the Roman world and which, as ever before, experienced almost every one, whether he is a slave or a free citizen, a small merchant or a big slave or an aristocrat. As a reaction to the crisis, in various parts of the empire the civil wars and the slavery uprising erupt in different parts of the empire. Under such conditions of life, the world around itself no longer seemed to man to be self-sufficient, harmonious, stable, "good" and warded by a cohort of traditional deities. Yes, and the gods themselves were now turned out to be incapable, unable to change the unceasing flow of fatal doom.

Published

05.12.1997

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

“The idea of becoming an individual in the context of early Christianity” (1997) Ukrainian Religious Studies, (6), pp. 43–51. doi:10.32420/1997.6.117.