The God of This House
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Caroline Johnson Hodge
About this book
Christianity is often thought of as a tradition of belief, interpretation, teachings, and texts. However, a scholarly focus on ideas overlooks how early Christian doctrine interacted with social exchanges in lay spaces.
Author Caroline Johnson Hodge fills this gap, shifting our attention from liturgical settings to religion as it was lived outside the prescriptions of congregations. Through a careful reading of the material record alongside print sources, Johnson Hodge shows that in the first through the early fourth centuries, Christians developed household rituals akin to traditional domestic cult practices around the Roman Empire, and this continuity contributed to the success of the new cult in the Roman world. Rather than a well-organized, universal domestic cult, Johnson Hodge finds that practices were flexible and varied, ranging widely from established household observances to unauthorized rituals, gravesite venerations, and the unpatrolled movements of women and slaves. Just as important as the official representations were the small gestures at hearths and doorways, the myriad ways in which followers of Christ incorporated their divine beings into the rituals of their households, shops, and tombs.
In bringing the lived-religion approach to bear on this formative period, Johnson Hodge’s study offers a fascinating portrait of a very “pagan” world within ancient Christianity. This book will be especially valuable to religious studies scholars and others interested in the origins of Christianity.
Shows how early Christians developed household cult practices by adapting traditional worship and how this practice contributed to the success of this new cult.
Most scholars have defined Christianity historically, have been trained to see Christianity as a series of doctrines, beliefs, and official rituals. Studying everyday practices offers a new way to understand the development of this new cult.
Johnson Hodge uses a lot of archaeological sources to anchor her analysis.
Author / Editor information
Topics
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Frontmatter
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CONTENTS
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ILLUSTRATIONS
viii -
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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ABBREVIATIONS
xi -
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Introduction “My God and the God of This House”
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1 Honoring the Gods in Households: Daily-Life Religious Practice in the Ancient Mediterranean
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2 Doorways, Bedrooms, and Kitchens: A Sampler of Everyday Christian Practices
27 -
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3 Amulets, Spells, and Gems: Seeking Protection and Healing in the Name of Christ
48 -
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4 Foreign Gods and Unsupervised Worship: Wives, Slaves, and Power
71 -
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5 “Peter and Paul, Keep Us in Mind”: The Cult of the Dead Among Pre-Constantinian Christ Followers
95 -
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Conclusion
122 -
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Notes
129 -
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Bibliography
160 -
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Index
183