[BOOK][B] A threat to public piety: Christians, Platonists, and the great persecution

EDP Digeser - 2017 - degruyter.com
2017degruyter.com
In A Threat to Public Piety, Elizabeth DePalma Digeser reexamines the origins of the Great
Persecution (AD 303–313), the last eruption of pagan violence against Christians before
Constantine enforced the toleration of Christianity within the Empire. Challenging the widely
accepted view that the persecution enacted by Emperor Diocletian was largely inevitable,
she points out that in the forty years leading up to the Great Persecution Christians lived
largely in peace with their fellow Roman citizens. Why, Digeser asks, did pagans and …
In A Threat to Public Piety, Elizabeth DePalma Digeser reexamines the origins of the Great Persecution (AD 303–313), the last eruption of pagan violence against Christians before Constantine enforced the toleration of Christianity within the Empire. Challenging the widely accepted view that the persecution enacted by Emperor Diocletian was largely inevitable, she points out that in the forty years leading up to the Great Persecution Christians lived largely in peace with their fellow Roman citizens. Why, Digeser asks, did pagans and Christians, who had intermingled cordially and productively for decades, become so sharply divided by the turn of the century?
Making use of evidence that has only recently been dated to this period, Digeser shows that a falling out between Neo-Platonist philosophers, specifically Iamblichus and Porphyry, lit the spark that fueled the Great Persecution. In the aftermath of this falling out, a group of influential pagan priests and philosophers began writing and speaking against Christians, urging them to forsake Jesus-worship and to rejoin traditional cults while Porphyry used his access to Diocletian to advocate persecution of Christians on the grounds that they were a source of impurity and impiety within the empire.
De Gruyter