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The Greek Legacy 50-170 CE. The distinction between the Jewish and Greek legacies is somewhat artificial. What is the Hellenistic Period?. Age ushered in by Alexander the Great from 332 BCE onward
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The Greek Legacy 50-170 CE The distinction between the Jewish and Greek legacies is somewhat artificial
What is the Hellenistic Period? • Age ushered in by Alexander the Great from 332 BCE onward • Spreading from India to Spain, Alexander’s empire makes possible the universalization of Greek culture • Extending into Roman times: Augustus hellenizes the most important regions and makes the Romans the patrons of Greek culture
Palestine • 1st century evidence of a trilingual culture: Aramaic, Hebrew, and Greek • Revolt of the Maccabees (168-74) against cultural and religious assimilation has little lasting effect on the process of Hellenization • The “seven” of Acts 6 and Paul are examples of Hellenist Jews. Many now believe that Jesus himself spoke some Greek and was influenced by the Hellenism of such centres as Sepphoris
Breaking With Hellenism • Judaism much more concerned with highlighting its own separate identity after wars of 66 and 135, but Greek culture continues to influence even Rabbinic literature • Christianity does not follow Judaism in publicly breaking with Hellenism • Rise of Christianity leaves little lasting effect on Judaism but Christianity and Hellenism are both influenced by their encounter with each other
Hellenism and Early Christian Expansion • Common Greek culture and Hellenistic influences on Jews help early Christian expansion • 1st century figures display limited contact with “higher” education • Paul of hellenized Tarsus, educated by the Pharisee Gamaliel in Jerusalem (Acts 22:3), training in rhetoric, pharisaic exegesis, and probably only philosophy in a popular form
Schools of Philosophy • With focus on virtue and vice, true happiness, and human condition, ancient philosophical schools had a considerable amount in common with early Christianity • Cynics: philosophical anecdotes, focus on simplicity, and personal decision. Frequently compared to teaching style of Jesus. Challenge to conventional society
Schools of Philosophy • Stoicism: Focus on ethics and self-mastery. Divine reality and providence at work in the world • Epicureans: highly organized communities (collegia). Freedom from illusory anxieties and false needs • Middle Platonism: Viewed as true interpretation of Plato, includes some teaching from Aristotle and other philosophical schools. Dominant conglomerate in first and second centuries CE • In early stages sometimes considered a rival of sorts
Openness to Philosophy • Admiration prevails, then eventually emulation • Philosophical school becomes one of the models for emerging Christianity: Clement of Alexandria proclaims Christianity to be the best school • Philosophical approach allows Christian message to reach more elite classes • Interest in morality among philosophers makes philosophical school appear more compatible than religious cults viewed as ruled by demons
Justin Martyr (100-165) • Born into a Greek-speaking non-Jewish family at Flavia Neapolis (Schechem) in Samaria • Converted to Platonism in his late teens or early twenties • Witnessed Christian bravery and became a convert to Christianity. In writings of Jewish prophets and Church finds the “true philosophy” • Christ is the universal logos: portions of it are found in the Jewish prophets and Greek philosophers